Our new scenario assumptions are in accordance with our methodology for stress testing outlined in "Credit Stress Testing For Financial Institutions," published on 29 April 2009.
"We expect no major rating actions as a result of stress testing, as we believe that our existing Kazakhstan bank ratings already reflect high system stress," added Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Ekaterina Trofimova, the other author of the report.
The assumptions apply to the entire Kazakh banking sector. “We will apply customized assumptions case by case to loans and other assets of Kazakh banks. The application of systemwide assumptions to individual rated Kazakh banks may differ from the application to the entire system, due to portfolio mix and single-name or group concentrations. Many Kazakh banks have concentrated corporate loan books and single name and industry exposures can lead to material divergence between banks. We expect that restructured loans, especially those of corporate borrowers, will constitute most of the systemwide estimated problem loans”, the company said.
"By the end of 2009, we expect Kazakh banks’ problem loans to exceed 50% of total loans for the system as the whole, but reach only 40% for nondefaulted banks," added Ms. Trofimova.
“We define problem loans as cumulative nonperforming loans (loans overdue by more than 30 days, including performing portions of loans with missed repayments, and loans to related parties of problem borrowers), restructured loans, and loans involving repossessed collateral”, the company noted.
The criteria outlined in this article are effective immediately, it added.