You're reading: Fitch will upgrade Ukraine’s rating after successful completion of debt exchange

Ukrainian bank ratings are likely to remain at current weak levels for the foreseeable future despite signs of some improvement in the operating environment now that agreement to restructure $18 billion of sovereign external debt has been reached, Fitch Ratings has reported on its website.

“The country’s three largest banks also restructured around $2.9 billion of debt owed to international creditors, easing near-term liquidity risks. Nonetheless, capital shortfalls for the sector are considerable and capital adequacy ratios no longer meet minimum requirements. Viability Ratings assigned by Fitch to Ukraine’s banks are mostly in the ‘CCC’ level, indicating substantial credit risk and likelihood of default,” reads the report.

“Deposit trends are nevertheless becoming less negative, with outflows slowing to 2.5 percent in Q2, 2015 against 8% in Q1, 2015 and a 22 percent outflow reported by the sector in 2014, adjusted for exchange rate effects. Stabilization of the hryvnia since Q2, 2015 supports deposit stability but confidence levels are low and deposit volatility is likely to return if the exchange rate comes under renewed pressure. In our view, it could take several years before deposit stability reverts to pre-crisis levels and pricing normalizes,” the rating agency stated.

“We believe capital will become further strained as unexpected credit losses continue to surface. Impaired loans have surged and loan restructuring is widespread. Impaired loans, net of reserves, totaled Hr95 billion ($4.3 billion) at end-June 2015, equivalent to 95 percent of sector equity. In addition, risk weightings increased due to substantial hryvnia depreciation, which inflates the local currency equivalent of foreign currency assets, further weakening capital ratios,” Fitch said.

“Recovery prospects are highly dependent on macro-economic improvement but the operating environment is particularly weak. Fitch forecasts GDP to contract by 10 percent in 2015, following contraction of 6.8 percent in 2014,” the agency experts said.

“The asset quality review and stress test being performed on the country’s 20 largest banks, which together represent 81 percent of sector assets, are likely to uncover additional problem loans. Regulators will have to agree bank recapitalization plans with shareholders to reach targeted 5 percent capital adequacy ratios in 2016. In the meantime, regulators are applying forbearance, allowing lenders to continue to operate while in breach of solvency ratios until end-2018. We expect a protracted solvency recovery, driven by general shareholder reluctance to inject additional capital into the failing banks,” reads a statement.

“Regulatory forbearance, cash withdrawal restrictions and exchange controls are important elements that support the banking sector’s ability to function. We do not expect these measures to be fully lifted in the foreseeable future,” the agency said.

“Reaching agreement with creditors on $18 billion of sovereign bonds in August unlocked the inflow of IMF funding, part of a $40 billion assistance program. Agreement still has to be reached about how to restructure a $3 billion bond owed to Russia,” according to the document.

“Ukraine’s foreign currency issuer default rating was downgraded to ‘Restricted Default’ on Oct. 6, 2015. Ukraine’s ratings will be upgraded shortly after Fitch determines that the exchange has been successful. The new rating will be consistent with Ukraine’s prospective credit profile and debt structure,” the experts summarized.