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Credit Conditions: Largely Stable InAsia-Pacific, With A Dash Of NegativeAnd A Focus On China's FinancialSector Risks
Primary Credit Analyst:
Andrew D Palmer, Melbourne (61) 3-9631-2052; [email protected]
Secondary Contact:
Fabienne Michaux, Melbourne (61) 3-9631-2050; [email protected]
Table Of Contents
The Macroeconomic Environment: Steady Growth Is Expected Across
Asia-Pacific
Financing Conditions
Risks And Imbalances
Sector Trends: Largely Stable With A Dash Of Negative
Credit Trends: Outlook Remains Cautious
Related Research
Appendices
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Credit Conditions: Largely Stable In Asia-Pacific,With A Dash Of Negative And A Focus On China'sFinancial Sector Risks
(Editor's Note: Standard & Poor's Credit Conditions Committees meet quarterly to review the macroeconomic
environment in each of four regions (Asia/Pacific, Europe/Middle East/Africa, Latin America, and North America).
Discussions center on identifying credit risks in various sectors and outlining the potential impact these risks might have
on ratings. The committees also evaluate how economic conditions will influence borrowing and lending activity for
businesses and consumers within those regions in the following few months. This article reflects the view developed
during the Asia-Pacific Credit Conditions Committee discussion of March 14, 2014.)
While risks have generally subsided for the time being, flatter economic growth and potential financial markets
volatility resulting from any quantitative easing tapering make for some potential credit headwinds for Asia-Pacific
issuers.
Standard & Poor's outlook for real GDP growth for Asia-Pacific as a whole remains broadly unchanged from
December. We expect China, which accounts for just under half of the region's GDP, to continue to see a gradual
moderation in growth in line with that country's policymakers' desire for rebalancing China's economy and reining in
financial excesses. Japan's growth should moderate as well, as the initial boost from Abenomics subsides. In contrast,
we expect a pick-up in 2014 growth for the more trade-dependent economies of Asia-Pacific, given the expected
improvements in the U.S. and European economies and the resultant rise in global trade. Although emerging Asia is
likely to experience periodic episodes of capital outflows as U.S. monetary policy normalizes, we believe that much of
the market adjustment has already taken place, leaving less pricing space for the markets if further weakness occurs.
These assumptions have underpinned our baseline scenario for 2014 and 2015 since the December Credit Conditions
Committee meeting, and as such there are only minor changes to our baseline forecasts in the current round.
However, in this forecast we have revised our downside scenarios to incorporate rising near-term risks in China's
financial sector.
OVERVIEW
Overall growth in Asia-Pacific in 2014 will be broadly unchanged from 2013. However, there are some
divergences across sub-regions.
The largest economies will see moderating growth. China's authorities are steering the economy onto a more
sustainable growth path, while Japan's initial boost from Abenomics is fading.
Improvements in the U.S. economic outlook, as well as global trade, will result in slightly better growth profiles
in South Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore. Indian growth should pick up as well, due in part to a low
base.
The more domestically-oriented ASEAN economies are likely to see slower growth, for various reasons.
Moral hazard concerns continue to mount in China's financial sector in light of widespread perceptions of
government guarantees. This takes place amidst moderating growth, creating rising near term risks. If
unchecked, these could pose significant downside growth risks to China, the rest of the region and beyond.
Sector credit trends are largely stable with a dash of negative--about 20% of issuer credit ratings in Asia-Pacific
were on negative outlook or CreditWatch with negative implications as of February 2014.
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The Macroeconomic Environment: Steady Growth Is Expected AcrossAsia-Pacific
Our baseline macroeconomic views for Asia-Pacific as a whole in the near term have not changed materially since
December 2013. We continue to see GDP growth as being broadly unchanged from 2013--below trend but reasonably
solid (see table 1). The steady overall pace masks a divergence between the growth paths of China and Japan
(together, 60% of regional GDP) from that of the rest of the region.
Table 1
GDP Proposed Scenarios, March 2014
Baseline Downside Upside
(%)2014f 2015f 2016f 2014f 2015f 2016f 2014f 2015f 2016f
Australia 2.6 3.0 3.1 1.8 1.7 2.6 2.9 3.4 3.4
China 7.4 7.2 7.0 6.1 6.0 6.6 7.9 7.6 7.2
India* 6.0 6.3 6.5 4.7 5.0 5.2 6.2 6.7 7.0
Japan 1.3 1.2 1.2 0.5 0.4 0.9 1.6 1.6 1.7
South Korea 3.5 3.8 3.8 1.5 1.7 3.3 4.6 4.8 4.2
Hong Kong 3.6 4.1 3.6 0.3 0.4 3.5 5.5 5.5 4.9
Indonesia 5.6 5.8 6.0 4.6 4.7 5.8 6.0 6.2 6.1
Malaysia 5.2 5.6 5.7 3.9 3.4 5.0 6.2 5.7 5.6
Philippines 6.6 6.0 6.1 5.3 4.8 5.7 7.0 6.7 6.6
Singapore 3.7 3.9 3.5 0.5 0.7 2.7 4.9 5.1 4.4
Taiwan 3.7 3.9 3.8 0.8 0.7 3.3 4.9 5.2 4.0
Thailand 2.7 5.1 4.4 1.6 3.5 3.8 3.5 4.7 4.8
Vietnam 5.5 6.0 6.3 4.5 4.5 4.7 6.3 6.5 6.9
New Zealand 3.1 2.5 2.5 1.9 2.0 2.1 3.5 3.3 3.0
Asia Pacific 5.4 5.4 5.4 4.1 4.1 4.8 5.9 5.9 5.7
EM Asia 6.3 6.4 6.3 4.9 4.9 5.7 6.9 6.8 6.6
NIE 3.6 3.9 3.7 1.1 1.2 3.3 4.8 5.0 4.2
ASEAN 5.1 5.7 5.7 3.9 4.2 5.1 5.7 5.9 5.9
*Fiscal year ending March. Regional aggregates are calculated as a weighted average using 2012 GDP measured in PPP terms. f--Forecast.
China is likely to continue its gradual moderation in the pace of activity as policymakers attempt to steer the economy
onto a more sustainable growth path. In Japan, the effects of the increase in consumption tax continue to pose the
largest risk to growth and especially the fight against deflation, as the initial boost from Abenomics begins to fade.
Australia has passed the peak of its investment boom, but exports should be able to provide decent growth in the short
term as previous years' mining investments come online. India is in the midst of a period of sub-par growth, challenged
by structural rigidities and also by tighter policies implemented to combat inflation and capital outflows stemming
from the market turbulence of mid-2013. The more export-dependent Tiger economies (the highly
developed economies of Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan) will likely see a pick-up in growth this year
given the improvements in the U.S. economy and global trade, as well as a modest improvement in Europe. Finally,
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the southeast Asian economies' growth outlooks are increasingly driven by country-specific factors.
Thailand is the one exception, where we significantly revised our baseline forecasts downward. The domestic political
turmoil has gone on longer than expected, and there is little indication of what the end game might be. As such, we
have lowered our growth forecast by 1.7 percentage points for 2014 to 2.7%, given the disruptions that the political
situation is causing within the economy and the negative effect it will have on confidence.
Another key macroeconomic view that we believe remains valid is the ongoing emerging market sell-off. In the
previous Credit Conditions Committee we noted that there was less downside risk for Asia-Pacific's markets should
financial turbulence resume. Moreover, policymakers in the most vulnerable economies (India and Indonesia) have
taken steps to address their structural weaknesses, including easing restrictions on foreign investment and tightening
monetary policies to cool domestic demand, reining in current account deficits, and increasing the attractiveness of
their economies for global investors. In the current "risk off" environment, this so far appears to be largely correct.
Relative to the previous bouts of stress between May and September last year, exchange rate depreciation in
Asia-Pacific has been quite modest. Also, in contrast to the outsized impact on the twin deficit economies of India and
Indonesia during the last round, the outflows appear more evenly distributed this time around. As such, we continue to
expect the region's financial markets to exit this phase of emerging market stress relatively unscathed.
We continue to expect inflation to remain under control across most of the region. Although improving external
growth prospects will likely cause a narrowing of output gaps and an uptick in inflation--especially in the Tiger
economies--the sub-par growth performance of the past few years suggests that most economies are still operating
below capacity. The Philippines may be the exception, having experienced rapid growth driven by the
business-process-outsourcing sector and the significant spillovers it has had on the rest of the economy. Japan and
Malaysia will likely see higher inflation from consumption taxes. In India and Indonesia, tighter monetary policy
enacted during the previous round of financial market stress will cause inflation to moderate. (Note that in this Credit
Conditions Committee we have shifted from forecasting the Wholesale Price Index to the Consumer Price Index for
India.)
Monetary Policy
On the monetary policy front, we see very little impulse for policy makers to move interest rates in either direction
over the year. Policy rates are still either very accommodative, growth steady, or improving, and inflation is largely
benign. The key exception remains the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ), which is likely to tighten settings
steadily on concerns about the possible overheating of the housing and construction market; indeed, the RBNZ raised
its policy rate in March 2014. The Philippine central bank may also need to cool its economy after consecutive years of
above-trend growth, but the bank's view remains that potential growth has increased. Meanwhile, Bank of Thailand
will likely prefer to ease monetary conditions to provide support to an economy that is being hindered by political
gridlock, as seen by its recent rate cut. In the rest of the region, India and Indonesia have tightened ahead of their
neighbors, reducing the need to raise policy rates much further. The People's Bank of China will likely hold its main
policy rate steady while increasing the relative importance of its open market operations within its policy toolkit.
Already, it has extended its liquidity facilities to include small and medium banks. Finally, we would not rule out the
Bank of Japan increasing its rate of asset purchases to try to counter the effects of the consumption tax hike on
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disposable incomes and confidence should growth slow and prices start to fall again.
We continue to attach a 60%-70% probability for our baseline scenario. Below, we give further details:
China's growth remains strong by emerging market standards, despite slowing to around 7.5% from 8%-10% over
the past two decades. We expect the authorities to continue steering the economy onto a more sustainable growth
path as financial-sector risks, stemming from fast credit growth, remain elevated, and are rising. As such, we see
China gradually moderating from its current pace of growth to around 7% by 2016. Nonetheless, structural risks
remain, particularly in the financial sector, where banking regulations and perceived state guarantees have led to 1)
high credit growth in the shadow banking sector, and 2) a generalized mispricing of risk in the system. Though
disorderly fallout from this situation is not our baseline scenario, this poses the most significant risk to growth in
China and the region in the next few years, in our view.
Japan's economy received a confidence and growth boost last year from Abenomics. The domestic economy
strengthened and inflation has turned positive by most metrics. However, the consumption tax that is scheduled to
rise by 3 percentage points in April could significantly dampen that momentum. Crucially, the decreased spending
power of households poses a key difficulty for undoing long-standing deflation expectations. The Bank of Japan
might try to increase the pace of its asset-purchase program should growth slow significantly and prices start to fall
again.
Australia still faces the difficult task of rebalancing its investment away from the mining sector as China reins in its
investment binge. This will remain a key drag on growth in 2014, despite some offset from a stronger housing
market. We expect growth to remain at close to 2.5% this year before rising to about 3% in 2015. The labor market
will probably remain weak in the near term. In New Zealand, there have been significant improvements in
confidence and the labor market, while concerns about an overheating property market increase. This sets the stage
for rate increases--perhaps significant ones--by the RBNZ.
India and Indonesia used the time between the mid-2013 emerging market sell-off and the start of U.S. Federal
Reserve ("Fed") tapering in December to address their respective vulnerability issues. The authorities in both
economies have undertaken measures to restore confidence and reduce external deficits, as GDP growth and
exchange rates weakened sharply. As such, investors have so far given both economies the benefit of the doubt in
the latest round of emerging market volatility. Political uncertainty in both countries, owing to elections in
mid-2014, remains a near-term issue.
The trade-driven Tiger economies are likely to see stronger growth this year than last, as the outlook for U.S.
growth and global trade flows improves. However, our baseline forecasts for 2014 and 2015 are only modestly up
from the December Credit Conditions Committee round despite the upward revision of our U.S. forecast. This is
because our previous baseline already incorporated the strength of the U.S. private sector, while the latest U.S.
revisions were largely driven by the removal of the fiscal drag.
The relatively more domestically-oriented southeast Asian economies may face slower growth this year. The factors
leading to easing growth are country-specific. In Malaysia and Thailand, rising household debt would weigh down
on consumption. In Indonesia, growth will be hurt by the much tighter monetary policy stance that the central bank
enacted to rein in both inflation and the current account deficit. In the Philippines, growth could normalize from its
rapid pace in 2013, although post-disaster rebuilding efforts could provide an offset in the short term. In Thailand,
political turmoil has pulled down the growth outlook significantly for this year.
In contrast to our broadly unchanged baseline views, recent developments have led us to reconsider our alternative
scenarios, particularly the downside. Previously, the key drivers of our near-term downside scenarios were growth
risks in the advanced economies. Meanwhile, we had long recognized that fast growth in China's opaque non-bank
financial system, taken together with slower economic growth and perceived widespread government guarantees and
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moral hazard, posed a key medium-term growth risk (but only a tail risk in the very near term).
We now see an increased likelihood of the Chinese authorities addressing its country's financial sector risks sooner
than thought, possibly as early as this year. Under our base case scenario, spillover effects on investment and growth
from such an event can largely be contained, especially given the authorities' track record in dealing with external and
internal shocks over the past decades, as well as the existing policy space and macroeconomic buffers. But the
downside risks cannot be ignored.
Our increasing concern lies with a fast-growing class of credits outside of the banking sector, most notably,
wealth-management products (WMPs) issued by non-bank entities such as local government financing vehicles,
property developers, and trust companies. The underlying assets can essentially be anything. These products are sold
through the state-guaranteed banks and promise returns that are much higher than WMPs issued by the banks
themselves, making them very attractive to investors. Crucially, there is widespread belief in China that the state
guarantee of the banks that distribute WMPs extends to these non-bank initiated products as well. This leads to moral
hazard in the form of risks not being correctly monitored and priced. That results in oversupply and underpricing of
such risky products.
The Chinese authorities are well aware of these risks, and in our view they will, at some point, address the moral
hazard problem by allowing selective failure of some non-bank WMPs. However, determining the gravity and timing of
the fallout from such an event is fraught with uncertainty, given the opaque nature of the financial system. For our
downside scenario, we attempt to lay out what could go wrong in China if the fallout from such an event is less than
smooth.
Under the downside scenario, a credit event in the non-bank portion of the financial sector leads to market instability
as perceptions of state guarantees unravel. This would initiate a turbulent period in which funding could dry up as the
domestic market struggles to re-price risk across a broad spectrum of credit products. Even viable investments could
struggle to be financed. As a result, China's growth could fall sharply for at least a few quarters, led by investment. We
note, however, that a) China's fiscal and monetary authorities will almost certainly step in strongly to try to mitigate
the fallout from such an event, and b) the self-financed nature of the system rules out a full-blown external or fiscal
crisis. The effectiveness of the policy response would be crucial in determining the length and severity of such a credit
event.
This scenario would have significant spillover effects into the rest of the region as well. Economies that are highly
exposed to China's investment demand stand to see the largest slowdowns. Specifically, in Hong Kong, Australia, and
most likely Taiwan (where data are not available), capital and/or raw materials exports to China account for large
percentages of total exports--close to 40% for Hong Kong and around 25% for Australia. Korea, Japan, and the
Philippines form the next tier, with China-bound capital and/or raw materials shipments making up 10% or more of
total exports for each. India is the least vulnerable, at 2.5% (see chart 1).
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Chart 1
We note that because we now regard China's financial sector risk as being in the near term, the balance of risks around
our baseline view now tilts to the downside. We have raised the probability of our downside scenario by 5% to
20%-25%.
We are keeping our upside scenarios largely unchanged from the last Credit Conditions Committee. However, we have
reduced the probability we attach to this scenario by 5%, to 10%-15%. This scenario involves faster-than-expected
recoveries in the U.S. and, to a lesser extent, Europe. Global trade picks up as well. Once again, the Tiger economies
are the main beneficiaries in Asia-Pacific. Stronger-than-expected growth would also see output gaps beginning to
close across the region. Interest rate normalization could happen faster, but central banks in economies with rising
household debt (South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia) will find space to tighten has been limited. In the more detailed
discussion of growth numbers that follows, we will focus on the likely growth impact of our new downside scenario.
The credit event described above could reduce China's growth to around 6% over the next two years, staying below
7% into 2016; on a quarterly basis the effects of the shock would be more pronounced. The significant slowdown in
growth might turn even more financial system credit, including bank loans, sour, leading to further reluctance by
banks to finance growth. In this scenario, the policy response will be key in mitigating the length and depth of the
slowdown. We would expect both the central government and the People's Bank of China (PBOC) to put their full
weight behind the economy in such a scenario. The public balance sheet might be used to absorb impaired assets,
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while the central bank might infuse liquidity to keep solvent but temporarily illiquid banks afloat. Crucially, bank
reserves locked up at the PBOC could be released while authorities urge banks to lend to targeted key development
projects.
In Japan, 10% of total exports consist of capital goods shipments to China. The investment slowdown in China
would compound the previously held downside scenario, wherein we envisioned slower growth in U.S. and Europe
as well as a larger-than-expected slowdown in consumption following the consumption tax increase. Growth would
slow to significantly below 1%, and crucially, so would inflation.
Australia is the second most exposed economy to an investment slowdown in China. Almost a quarter of its exports
are raw materials shipped to China. In our downside scenario, Australia's growth falls to less than 2% over the next
two years. In contrast, New Zealand's exposure to China's investment story is much smaller.
As mentioned above, India is the least exposed to China's investment growth in Asia. As such, we are keeping our
downside scenario unchanged from December, in which India's growth falls to 4.2% in fiscal 2013-2014 and 4.7%
the following year. This is predicated on a fractured government mandate after the elections, monsoons turning
unfavorable and industrial production losing the little momentum it currently has.
The credit-led slowdown in China heavily affects the Tiger economies of Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, and
Singapore. The first three are heavily exposed to China's investment through their capital goods exports, particularly
Hong Kong. Growth in the Tigers could slow by as much as 1 percentage point relative to the baseline. Within this
group, Singapore's exports are the least exposed to China's investment story; however, Singapore would still see
significantly lower growth in the downside because of the slowdowns in key neighboring trading partners.
In the ASEAN group, capital and raw materials exports to China typically account for less than 10% of total
shipments. We still reduced growth in our downside scenarios relative to December because of the significance of
China to their key trading partners, but by less than in the other sub-regions. Within this group, the Philippines is the
most exposed to China overall, and therefore saw the biggest downward revisions in the scenario.
Financing Conditions
We expect that the majority of central banks in the Asia-Pacific will hold policy interest rates (see the Monetary Policy
section) relatively steady in 2014 as to varying degrees they shadow the Fed in anchoring the short end of yield curves.
However, we think that market interest rates of longer tenors are likely to creep up in 2014-2015, as the U.S. economy
recovers and the Fed tapers its asset purchases. A critical part of this process will be the strategies of central banks in
managing interest rate rises as they change the relative funding costs of issuers in the region.
While investment strategies vary across the region, we expect some large funds to continue to favor a carry-and-credit
strategy while keeping durations low until yields rise toward the levels seen at the end of August. Consequently, some
funds will emphasize the intermediate part of the yield curve while remaining defensive in longer maturity bonds and
buying selectively, in our view.
Although we continue to see ongoing volatility in emerging market bonds, we believe that some dollar-denominated
emerging-market bonds will benefit from any rise in the U.S. currency, as the Fed moves closer to raising interest rates
from their record low.
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Risks And Imbalances
The risks emanating from advanced economies--namely, the U.S. fiscal policy and contagion from eurozone
problems--have receded, in our view. Therefore, we have removed them from the global top risks that we are most
actively monitoring. The current top global risks are summarized in table 2.
Table 2
Top Global Risks Q1 2014
Risk Level* Trend
Geopolitical risk that leads to financial turmoil or economic shock (escalation of Ukraine crisis, China-Japan
conflict, Middle East turmoil, North Korea threats)
Moderate Increasing
Unexpected disruption in Chinas gradual rebalancing efforts, stemming from rising financial sector risks Moderate Increasing
Disorderly exit from quantitative easing and impact of Fed normalization of interest rates, particularly on
emerging markets
Moderate Stable
*Risk levels may be classified as very low, low, moderate, elevated, high, or very high. Trends may be classified as stable, decreasing,
or increasing.
As outlined in table 2, we point to increasing geopolitical risks around the globe. Tensions between China and Japan
remain, as do issues in Syria, Iran, and North Korea. Most recently there has been the escalation of the Ukraine crisis,
and the tensions that has created between Western governments and Russia. These may have significant economic
effects around the globe should any of them materialize. However, the fallout would be hard to quantify ex ante.
In our view the global economic recovery is on track. The key driver for the global economy is that the U.S. continues
to recover as fiscal headwinds abate. Global economic risks have generally receded. In the base case scenario we do
not anticipate the Fed tapering/normalizing interest rates, nor greater market volatility derailing the global economy,
although emerging markets will likely remain under pressure from it.
Relative to the previous round, U.S. fiscal risks have abated significantly, particularly for this year, as key agreements
between the Democrats and Republicans were struck. This largely reduces the fiscal drag on the U.S. economy that
has been present in the past few years. Meanwhile, the private sector remains resilient, notwithstanding the headwinds
from abnormally cold weather in recent months. This momentum has led to continued recovery in the housing and
labor markets, as well as positive knock-on effects on consumer spending. The U.S. energy boom is also providing
positive support.
One main global risk coming from the U.S. remains that of an adverse market reaction to the Fed's process of
monetary policy normalization. This will likely affect emerging markets more negatively than the U.S. itself, as the Fed
generally sets policy with specific domestically-oriented goals. For now, as we mention above, Asia-Pacific's markets
are being spared from market turbulence. However, further normalization over the medium term, particularly on
interest rates, and large unforeseen short-term fluctuations still hold the potential to destabilize Asian markets or
expose various weaknesses.
These risks fall under two general categories. The first is short-term funding stress due to capital outflows, which will
tend to affect economies that have large external and fiscal deficits. The second is the possibility of asset-price
corrections if global interests rise more rapidly than borrowers had expected, leading to difficulties in financing debt
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burdens. Economies that have increased leverage significantly over the past few years (Korea, Singapore, Malaysia,
Thailand -) maybe the potential candidates. However, this latter risk is likely a medium-term one, outside of the
current forecast horizon.
We continue to view a disruption in China's rebalancing as a risk. Chinese financial sector risk is rising as banking
regulations and perceived state guarantees have led to high growth in the shadow banking sector and a potential
mispricing of risk in the system. Although not our baseline assumption, this poses a significant risk if not managed to
the growth in China and the Asia-Pacific region.
Standard & Poor's also forecasts a slight economic recovery in Western Europe, albeit an uneven one. Still, some
uncertainties remain, including tight monetary policy conditions as the credit channel remains dysfunctional. This also
leads to risks to corporate investment. Further, the risk of deflation is present, particularly if the euro remains strong
and commodity prices ease further, while the European Central Bank (ECB) faces some institutional challenges in
enacting unconventional measures. As Europe remains one of Asia-Pacific's largest trading partners, these risks still
pose a potential crucial headwind.
Sector Trends: Largely Stable With A Dash Of Negative
Sovereigns: Risk of Inadequate Policy Response To QE Tapering
Disorderly market responses or inappropriate policy responses to the withdrawal of quantitative easing are still a risk
to sovereign creditworthiness. The long-awaited start of Fed tapering has had modest impact on the Asia-Pacific so far.
India and Indonesia, despite being grouped in the so-called "fragile five", have seen their currencies recover part of
their losses in 2013.
Nevertheless, with important national elections due this year in both, political events that hurt confidence and cause
renewed capital outflows are still possible. In the scenario of wider risk averseness toward emerging markets, other
sovereigns whose economies depend much on external financing could also be affected.
Relatively high levels of domestic credit in important economies--including China, Korea, and Australia--constrain
monetary policy as a countercyclical tool in another economic slowdown (see "An Asia-Pacific Credit Crisis Remains
UnlikelyBut The Signs Are There," published Feb. 17, 2013). Stimulating credit growth further with monetary easing
could increase financial risks even if it lifts short-term growth. This is likely why China's finance minister said that he
would consider China's target growth rate achieved even if it comes in as low as 7.2%.
Officially, China still targets annual real GDP growth of 7.5%. However, the risk that growth decelerates more sharply
than policymakers expect--at least temporary--cannot be ruled out. In this scenario, the financial risks in China could
grow further. This would have longer term impact on financial and economic stability in the country. Pressures on
economic growth could also spread across the Asia-Pacific. This could have implications for the ratings of some
sovereigns if the policy responses are insufficient to limit the impact on credit fundamentals.
Geopolitical risks in the Asia-Pacific seem unlikely to die down anytime soon. Frictions between China and Japan
continue while Korea-Japan relations remain cool. We believe that common interest in maintaining economic stability
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will continue to prevent a serious escalation of tensions. Still, risks of miscalculations or accidental military contact
have risen with the increased (see "Shared Economic Interests In A Stable Asia-Pacific Should Help Contain
Geopolitical Risks")
Finally, a renewed global slowdown triggered by events in the U.S. or Europe could still hurt sovereign
creditworthiness in this region. However, latest indicators continue to show continued recovery in the major
developed markets. The likelihood of this has eased compared with the previous Credit Conditions Committee.
As of early March 2014 three Asia-Pacific long-term sovereign ratings have negative outlooks and none have positive
outlook. The remaining 19 carry stable outlooks.
Public Finance: Tax-Collection Key To Stability
The outlook for public finance is mainly stable (see table 3). The primary macroeconomic risk to several of
Asia-Pacific's local and regional governments (LRGs) relates to their ability to collect corporate, mining, employment,
housing, and consumption taxes. LRGs reliant on property rates, such as those in New Zealand, Australia, and Japan,
are not as vulnerable to national GDP conditions as many other LRGs tend to be.
Table 3
Asia Pacific Public Finance Trends, Next 12 Months
Sector Current Business Conditions Business Outlook Finance Trends Sector Outlook
Australian states Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
Local governments Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
Higher education Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
In Australia, the main risks to LRGs relate to consumption, specifically for the state governments that rely on the goods
and services tax to fund services; and transaction taxes associated with houses being bought and sold rather than sat
upon. Mining royalties are particularly important to the states of Western Australia and Queensland, and the soft
commodity prices are impacting both of these state's operating performance. These risks have begun to stabilize, with
revenue write-downs notably smaller in fiscal 2014. Over the medium term, the horizontal fiscal equalization system in
Australia will compensate these states for any reduction in own-source revenues.
In response to this slower revenue growth, the Australian states have undertaken structural rebalancing to varying
degrees, and we expect that the cost savings will start flowing through to the states' operating performances. Over the
medium term, this will support credit quality.
In Japan, we expect the increase of the national sales tax will ease the credit risks of rated prefectures and cities. The
national sales tax rate will be increased to 8% in April 2014 and to 10% in October 2015 from its current level of 5%.
Both prefectures and cities will have a share of the revenues from the tax increase. In 2014, we also anticipate the
recovery of corporate profit tax that will further support the prefectures' tax collections, while the urban cities will
enjoy the pick-up of the property rates as the real estate market begins to show signs of recovery.
Financial Institutions: Negative Economic Trends For Australia, India, Malaysia and New Zealand
Financial institutions will continue to be challenged with downward pressure because softer economic growth and
wary financial markets will likely weigh on their asset quality. Although we see GDP growth in Asia-Pacific improving,
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slower growth and tightening monetary conditions in China could have spillover effects on markets, including
Indonesia, Australia, Taiwan, Korea, and Hong Kong. In addition, the Fed will likely continue tapering its quantitative
easing program, and this could lead to more volatile foreign exchange and interest rates.
Another reason many banking systems in Asia-Pacific are more susceptible to external shocks is that both household
and corporate debt have risen to unprecedentedly high levels. Substantial inflows of capital and low interest rates amid
global monetary easing have supported high credit growth in the region, but we expect such conditions to hit a turning
point in 2014. Generally, we expect credit costs to rise, particularly in sectors that have excessive indebtedness.
Nevertheless, we believe a sharp increase in credit costs is unlikely because the region will benefit from a gradual
recovery in the global economy. Regulators in many countries have also taken preemptive measures over the past few
years to cool the expansion of property-related loans and asset inflation.
Compared with other regions, Asia-Pacific's banking sector has been characterized by resilience. Except for Thailand,
we did not change any of the region's respective economic and industry assessments under our Banking Industry
Country Assessment (BICRA) in 2013. However, we expect downward pressure to weigh on many countries' BICRA
scores. We have seen an increasing number of negative economic trends and negative changes in the BICRA
sub-scores. We lowered our BICRA on Thailand to group 6 from group 5, due to a rise in the country's private sector
and household debt, which could worsen economic imbalances. (For more details, see Credit FAQ What Revising Our
BICRA Score for Thailand Means for Its Banks," Dec. 6, 2013). We use our BICRA methodology to identify and
incorporate rising and receding risks for banks consistently and globally. BICRA determines the anchor rating for all
banks in the system, which is the starting point in assigning an issuer credit rating.
Table 4
Asia Pacific Banking Industry Trends
Economic risk factors Industry risk factors
BICRA
Group
Economic
resilience
Economic
imbalances
Credit
risk in
the
economy
Economic
risk score
Economic
risk trend
Institutional
framework
Competitive
dynamics
Systemwide
funding
Industry
risk
score
Industry
risk
trend
Australia 2 Very Low Intermediate Low 2 Negative Very Low Very Low Intermediate 2 Stable
China 5 Intermediate High High 6 Stable High High Very Low 5 Stable
India 5 High Low High 5 Negative High High Low 5 Stable
Indonesia 7 Very High Intermediate Very High 7 Stable Very High High Intermediate 7 Positive
Japan 2 Low Low Low 2 Stable Intermediate Intermediate Very Low 3 Stable
Korea 3 Intermediate Low High 4 Stable Intermediate Intermediate Low 3 Stable
Note: BICRA Group '1' to '10', from lowest to highest risk. Economic and Industry risk classified as "very low", "low", "intermediate", "high", "very high", or
"extremely high". For information about other Asia Pacific nations please see Banking Industry Country Risk Assessment Update: November 2013, Nov 6,
2013.
For the banking systems in Australia, New Zealand, India, and Malaysia, we assign negative economic trends. Of the
industry risk trends we see Indonesia trending positively on the back of improved bank regulations and supervision,
and stable trends for all other countries. We began to assign positive, stable, and negative trends scores in our view of
economic and industry risk in the first quarter, to better capture emerging risks (see "S&P to Publish Economic and
Industry Risk Trends for Banks").
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In China, we expect the banking sector's loan quality and profitability to slip further in 2014. Banks remain heavily
exposed to debt-laden local government financial platforms, and many manufactures saddled with oversupply. In
addition, distorted growth in China's shadow banking system could lead to an unintended build-up of credit risks. If
authorities' efforts to rein in growing shadow banking without causing disruption in the market are unsuccessful, the
sector's risk could spread to other parts of the economy. Nevertheless, our views about banking industry risks in China,
whose BICRA is group 5, incorporate a high degree of risk and volatility.
Insurance: Insurers Show Business and Financial Resilience
The sector outlook for life insurance, property & casualty, and reinsurance in Asia-Pacific is stable (see table 5), with a
benign net negative ratings outlook bias at February 2014. Two groups in Taiwan and Australia/New Zealand were
assigned positive CreditWatch on merger and acquisition activity, which was offset to a degree by some negative
outlook rating action on release of our Ratings Above the Sovereign Criteria (Nov. 19, 2013).
While the sector outlook for reinsurance remains stable, we acknowledge the business outlook is somewhat weaker,
with increased competition from global players and premium rate declines from the January 2014 renewal season
placing pressure on the sector. Still-good market growth in APAC versus markets like U.S. and in Europe protects
against a more negative assessment.
Table 5
Asia Pacific Insurance Trends, Next 12 Months
Current Business Conditions Business Outlook Finance Trends Sector Outlook
Life insurance Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
Property & casualty insurers Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
Reinsurers Satisfactory Somewhat weaker Same Stable
The economic slowdown in China and its impact on the wider region, as well as ongoing low interest rates in many
markets are likely to continue to constrain insurers' premium growth and earnings in the near term. Despite this
slowdown, the growth is still high relative to the developed markets outside Asia-Pacific. At the same time, the sector
in the region is also facing tightening and uncertainty in regulatory development, which could result in increase of cost
of capital and behavior of insurers in managing risks.
The key risks and trends for life insurers are slower economic growth in a number of Asian countries, capital pressure
due to asset risks, and potential earning volatilities due to volatile investment markets. Also, investment volatility,
asset-liability mismatches, and low interest rate returns continue to constrain our ratings on many life insurers (such as
those in China, Japan, and Taiwan), even though we see ongoing improvement in the structural management of these
risks.
Although growth moderated for life insurers because of the region's slower economy, those insurers still enjoy stronger
prospects than do the ones operating in the U.S. and Europe. Capital pressure exists from rapid growth markets such
as China, Malaysia, and Thailand. Prolonged low interest rates, asset-liability mismatch, and investment market
volatility continue to affect markets such as Taiwan and Japan, although profitability continues to improve under these
conditions. For Australia, the industry continues to be challenged by high lapse rates and disability claims patterns,
which, despite recent increases in pricing and tighter underwriting standards, is expected to continue over 2014.
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For property & casualty (non-life) insurers, the key risks include competitive pricing and natural catastrophe risks
exposure. At the same time, the risk-management control for a number of local players is still relatively less
sophisticated compared to life insurers. We expect the premium rates of the sector continue to be softened due to
combined effect of increasing competition and reinsurance capacity.
Although insurance losses from natural catastrophe claims have been low throughout 2013, we still believe the
potential for extraordinary natural catastrophe losses in some markets is a concern. We believe regulators' push for
risk management in the region is likely to improve awareness of its importance, in light of rising risk complexity in the
region for some players. An increase in the consumption tax in Japan in April 2014 is likely to affect the insurance
industry adversely, especially non-life profitability, but the adverse impact should be absorbed by revisions in premium
rates and cuts in operating expenses. Growth in the China non-life sector remains strong, with support from auto sales,
but the sector is subject to increasing catastrophe-risk exposure and capital shortfall pressures.
We have seen evidence of reinsurance price softening on recent catastrophe risk renewals, following the top of the
pricing cycle around 2012. Unmodeled risks due to climate change and urbanization will remain an industry issue.
For reinsurers, softening premium rates, higher retentions and ongoing competition in the non-catastrophe reinsurance
market are threatening the sustainability of profits.
Corporates: Metals And Mining Still Negative But Moderating
About 18% (15% on net basis) of the corporate issuer ratings pool is on negative outlook or on CreditWatch with
negative implications. Among the 17 industries covered, we view the 12-month outlook for metals and mining as
negative, and for building materials, capital goods, chemicals, consumer products, real estate development, and retail
as stable-to-negative (see table 6). The outlook on the other sectors (auto, diversified, gaming, oil & gas, real estate
investment trusts, technology, telecommunications, transportation-cyclical, transportation infrastructure and utilities)
is stable. (Healthcare is not displayed in table 6 because the sector comprises just three rated entities). As expected,
there is some correlation between the sector outlook discussed here and the net negative ratings bias discussed
previously. However the primary focus of the former is on economic and industry risk for the sector, while the latter,
by definition, includes issuer-specific rating risks.
Table 6
Asia Pacific Corporate Trends, Next 12 Months
Current Business Conditions Business Outlook Finance Trends Sector Outlook
Automakers and components Satisfactory Somewhat stronger Same Stable
Building materials, forest products and packaging Satisfactory Somewhat weaker Same Stable to negative
Capital goods, machinery Satisfactory No change Same Stable to negative
Chemicals Satisfactory No change Same Stable to negative
Consumer products, food Satisfactory No change Same Stable to negative
Diversified Stable Somewhat weaker Lower Stable
Gaming Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
Metals and minerals Weak No change Same Negative
Oil and gas Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
Real estate development Satisfactory Somewhat weaker Lower Stable to negative
Real estate investment trust Satisfactory No change Same Stable
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Table 6
Asia Pacific Corporate Trends, Next 12 Months (cont.)
Retailing Satisfactory Somewhat weaker Lower Stable to negative
High technology Satisfactory No change Same Stable
Telecommunications Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
Transportation cyclical Weak No change Same Stable
Transportation - infrastructure Satisfactory No change Same Stable
Utilities Satisfactory No change Same Stable
Automakers and components Satisfactory Somewhat stronger Same Stable
Structured Finance: Trends Stable Across Asset Classes
Structured finance credit conditions are satisfactory and the trends are stable (see table 7). Securities that have key
rating dependencies on transaction counterparties could continue to be affected the credit profiles of the
counterparties.
The economic outlook is mixed across countries in which outstanding Asia-Pacific structured finance securities are
predominantly domiciled. We expect economic growth to be relatively flat in Australia, to decline in Japan, and to
strengthen in Korea. However, we do not expect any material increase in the unemployment rate, which underpins the
resilience of household debt serviceability, and therefore the collateral performance of most residential-mortgage
backed securities (RMBS) and asset-backed securities (ABS). Additionally, for seasoned transactions,
credit-enhancement percentages for senior-ranking notes have continued to strengthen while the quality of underlying
collateral has improved over time. These improvements augur well for ratings to withstand a mild downturn.
Table 7
Asia Pacific Structured Finance Trends, Next
12 Months
Current Business
Conditions Business Outlook Finance Trends Sector Outlook
RMBS Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
ABS Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
CMBS Satisfactory No Change Same Negative
Structured credit Satisfactory No Change Same Stable
The Australian prime RMBS sector has significant exposure to lenders' mortgage insurance (LMI) cover, but most
senior-ranking note ratings could withstand lower ratings on LMI providers (currently in the 'AA' category) because of
additional credit enhancements that most transactions provide upfront. The ratings assigned to subordinated classes of
prime RMBS are more vulnerable to LMI providers' creditworthiness.
The number and volume of commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) outstanding in the Asia-Pacific region
have continued to decrease due to a lack of new issuances and the ongoing repayment of existing transactions. We
expect a stable performance in the CMBS sector in 2014, except for some lower rated tranches of Japanese CMBS that
are currently vulnerable to nonpayment from realizing losses from commercial real-estate loans that have defaulted. In
Japan, the commercial property sector is recovering.
Most structured credit transactions coming out of the Asia-Pacific region are synthetic in nature and tend to follow
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global trends because the reference entities are companies and financial institutions around the globe, rather than
regional ones.
Credit Trends: Outlook Remains Cautious
Overall, while risks have generally subsided for the time being, flatter economic growth, and potential financial
markets volatility as a result of any quantitative easing tapering make for some potential headwinds for Asia-Pacific
issuers in 2014. About 20% of issuer ratings were on negative outlook or CreditWatch with negative implications at
February 2014.
Among the major regional economies, the sovereign ratings on India and Japan are on negative outlook, which have a
knock-on effect on public finance ratings.
Related Research
Credit Conditions: Europe Is On A More Stable Path, Amid Turbulence In Emerging Markets, March 21, 2014
Credit Conditions: North America's Credit Conditions Remain Largely Favorable Despite Fed Tapering, March 21,
2014
Appendices
Table 8
CPI Forecasts
Base Downside Upside
(% average year-on-year) 2014f 2015f 2016f 2014f 2015f 2016f 2014f 2015f 2016f
Australia 2.7 2.7 2.8 2.5 2.0 2.1 2.9 3.0 3.2
China 3.0 3.0 2.7 2.6 2.2 2.0 3.2 3.3 2.8
India* 8.0 7.5 7.0 7.5 7.0 6.0 10.0 10.0 10.0
Japan 2.4 1.5 1.9 2.0 0.8 1.4 2.8 2.4 2.6
South Korea 2.2 3.0 2.9 1.6 2.0 2.3 2.4 3.4 3.2
Hong Kong 4.0 4.1 4.1 3.5 2.9 3.4 4.3 4.7 4.7
Indonesia 6.3 5.3 5.5 5.8 4.2 5.0 6.5 5.8 6.0
Malaysia 3.2 3.6 3.1 2.9 2.6 2.4 3.3 4.0 3.2
Philippines 4.1 3.5 3.7 3.9 2.9 3.3 4.4 3.9 3.9
Singapore 2.7 2.9 2.6 2.4 2.5 2.5 3.0 3.4 3.1
Taiwan 1.4 1.6 1.5 1.1 0.9 1.1 1.7 2.1 1.6
Thailand 2.4 2.7 2.7 2.0 1.9 2.3 2.4 2.9 3.0
Vietnam 6.9 6.5 6.1 6.6 5.8 5.4 7.0 6.9 6.5
New Zealand 2.0 2.1 2.1 1.3 1.5 1.7 2.7 2.5 2.2
f--Forecast.
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Table 9
Policy Rate Forecasts
Base Downside Upside
(%) 2014f 2015f 2016f 2014f 2015f 2016f 2014f 2015f 2016f
Australia 2.5 3.5 4.0 1.5 1.5 1.8 2.8 3.8 4.0
China 6.0 6.0 6.0 5.5 5.0 5.0 6.3 6.5 6.5
India* 8.0 8.0 8.0 7.8 7.5 7.0 8.0 8.5 9.0
Japan 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1
South Korea 2.5 2.5 3.0 2.0 2.0 2.3 2.8 3.3 3.5
Indonesia 7.8 7.5 7.5 7.0 7.0 7.0 8.0 8.0 8.0
Malaysia 3.5 4.0 4.0 2.5 2.5 2.8 3.8 4.3 4.3
Philippines 3.8 4.3 4.3 3.0 3.0 3.3 4.0 4.5 4.5
Taiwan 2.0 2.5 2.5 1.5 1.5 1.9 2.1 2.6 2.6
Thailand 1.8 2.3 2.3 1.5 1.5 1.8 2.5 3.3 3.3
Vietnam 6.5 6.5 6.5 6.5 5.0 5.0 6.5 7.0 7.0
New Zealand 3.5 4.5 5.0 2.5 2.8 2.8 4.0 4.3 4.3
f--Forecast.
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Additional Contacts:
Paul F Gruenwald, Singapore (65) 6216 1084; [email protected]
Vincent R Conti, Singapore (65) 6216 1188; [email protected]
Terry E Chan, CFA, Melbourne (61) 3-9631-2174; [email protected]
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Research:The Macroeconomic Environment: Steady Growth Is Expected Across Asia-PacificMonetary Policy
Financing ConditionsRisks And ImbalancesSector Trends: Largely Stable With A Dash Of NegativeSovereigns: Risk of Inadequate Policy Response To QE TaperingPublic Finance: Tax-Collection Key To StabilityFinancial Institutions: Negative Economic Trends For Australia, India, Malaysia and New ZealandInsurance: Insurers Show Business and Financial ResilienceCorporates: Metals And Mining Still Negative But ModeratingStructured Finance: Trends Stable Across Asset Classes
Credit Trends: Outlook Remains CautiousRelated ResearchAppendices