Mar 4, 2014 -
MARC has affirmed its AAA rating
on Woori Bank’s RM1.0 billion Medium Term Notes (MTN) programme with a stable
outlook. The affirmed rating reflects the bank’s strong banking franchise in
the Republic of Korea (South Korea) and systemic importance in South Korea as
well as its stable funding and liquidity profiles and sound capitalisation.
MARC rates the notes at the same level as South Korea, at AAA with a stable
outlook, on its national rating scale. MARC sets a country ceiling of ‘AAA’ for
ringgit-denominated bonds and notes issued by an entity that is domiciled in
and operates mainly in South Korea.
Woori Bank is the key banking
entity of Woori Finance Holdings Co Ltd (WFH), a government-controlled entity
in which the South Korean government, through Korean Deposit Insurance
Corporation (KDIC), currently holds a majority equity stake of about 57%. Woori
Bank is the second largest commercial bank in South Korea with consolidated
total assets of KRW248.1 trillion as at June 30, 2013, or 13% of the banking
system’s total assets. Woori Bank has an entrenched presence in the retail and
corporate banking segments in South Korea and has successfully grown
organically in its mature domestic market, underpinned by its extensive branch
network. As at end-December 2013, the bank operates a total of 993 branches
nationwide. MARC opines that as a systemically important bank in South Korea,
external support for Woori Bank will remain forthcoming regardless of any
changes in Woori Bank’s ownership structure should the South Korean government
privatise WFH.
Woori Bank’s core profitability
has weakened due to low interest rates amidst modest loan growth. The bank
posted lower net income of KRW417 billion for the nine-month financial period
ended September 30, 2013 (9M2013) (9M2012: KRW1.3 trillion) on account of a
decrease in interest income and a small loss on investment securities. Net
interest margin declined to 1.72% in 3Q2013 (4Q2012: 2.27%) following a cut in
the benchmark interest rate by the central bank in May 2013. This was
exacerbated by the spin-off of the bank’s credit card division, which had
higher margins compared to other divisions. Woori Bank’s gross loans on a non-consolidated
basis recorded a tepid growth of 2.8% in the first nine months of 2013, in line
with weak economic growth.
The bank’s credit costs remain
elevated in 9M2013 due to the weakened debt servicing capability of its large
corporates. In addition, the bank’s prudent stance in recognising impaired
loans has led to the high credit costs. The bank’s non-performing loans (NPL)
(loans classified as substandard and below) stood at KRW5.3 trillion as at
end-September 2013 on a non-consolidated basis, translating to gross NPL ratio
of 2.99%. Gross NPL increased by a sharp 85% from end-2012, mainly attributed
to a twofold increase in NPLs in the large corporate segment. MARC observes
that the bank’s NPL ratio is higher than the industry average of 1.80% at end-September
2013. With the surge in NPLs, the loan loss coverage ratio fell to 84.5% as at
end-September 2013 from over 100% as at year-end 2012.
Despite decreased profitability,
the bank registered adequate internal capital generation in 9M2013. Woori Bank
remains soundly capitalised and ranks the second most-capitalised bank amongst
its domestic peers. Its Tier 1 and total capital ratios improved to 12.0% and
15.3% respectively as of end-September 2013 (end-December 2012: 11.4%; 14.7%),
which are mainly attributed to a decrease in risk-weighted assets and issuance
of Tier 1 hybrid securities. The bank’s core equity (paid-up capital, retained
earnings and reserves) comprises about 85% of its Tier 1 capital, translating
to Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio of about 10%, which is well above the
regulatory minimum. Correspondingly, MARC expects Woori Bank to meet the
stricter Basel III capital requirements that came into effect on December 1,
2013.
Woori Bank’s funding profile is
underpinned by a strong and stable deposit base of mostly retail and commercial
deposits. This is attributed to the bank’s strong domestic franchise and branch
network in South Korea. The bank continues to focus on low-cost retail deposit
gathering with core and time deposits making up 37% and 55% of the bank’s total
deposits as at end-September 2013. MARC notes that Woori Bank’s loan-to-deposit
ratio rose to 99.6% as of end-September 2013 (2012: 96.4%). The bank’s foreign
currency funding still depends on wholesale sources, although the funding
profile has improved with the bank terming out its debt maturities. Its foreign
currency liquidity profile has also improved as reflected by the higher foreign
currency liquidity ratio.
MARC anticipates Woori Bank’s
interest margins to stabilise over the next 12 to 18 months as the South Korean
central bank is not expected to reduce the benchmark interest rate further. The
stable outlook reflects MARC’s expectations that Woori Bank’s credit profile
will remain commensurate with the current rating band, supported by proactive
oversight by the regulators.
Contacts:
Sharidan Salleh, +603-2082 2254/
sharidan@marc.com.my;
Se Tho Mun Yi, +603-2082 2263/ munyi@marc.com.my.
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