Fitch rates NDB’s Basel III sub debt final ‘A(lka)’

1 March 2019 12:45 am

Fitch Ratings has assigned National Development Bank PLC’s (NDB) (A+(lka)/Negative) proposed Basel III-compliant subordinated debentures a final National Long-Term Rating of ‘A(lka)’.  


The notes, which total up to Rs.6.5 billion with maturities of five years, include a non-viability clause and qualify as regulatory Tier II capital for the bank. The bank plans to use the proceeds to strengthen its Tier II capital base and support loan-book expansion. The debentures are to be listed on the Colombo Stock Exchange.  


The final rating is the same as the expected rating assigned on February 15, 2019 and follows the receipt of documents conforming to information already received.  


Fitch rates the proposed Tier II instrument one notch below the bank’s National Long-Term Rating to reflect the notes’ subordinated status and higher loss-severity risks relative to senior unsecured instruments. The notes would convert to equity upon the occurrence of a trigger event, as determined by the Monetary Board of Sri Lanka.   
NDB’s National Long-Term Rating is used as the anchor rating for these instruments, as it reflects its standalone financial strength and best indicates the risk of the bank becoming nonviable.   


Fitch has not applied additional notching to the proposed notes for non-performance risk, as they have no going-concern loss-absorption features, in line with the agency’s criteria.   
NDB’s National Long-Term Rating reflects its developing franchise and satisfactory asset quality relative to peers, which are balanced against declining capitalisation and above-sector loan growth.  


The Negative Outlook reflects our expectation of continued pressure on NDB’s capitalisation from its rising risk appetite in terms of high loan growth and increasing exposure to riskier retail and SME customer segments. Fitch believes the bank could continue to face challenges in the medium term in maintaining capital buffers that are commensurate with its risk appetite, even with capital raising, due to its above-sector growth aspirations - loan growth has averaged at 18 percent annually since 2014 - and probable higher regulatory requirements as a domestic systemically important bank. Capitalisation has been weakening, with the group’s Tier I capital ratio declining to 10.4 percent by end-2018 (end-2014: 12.9 percent), while the bank’s ratio stood at 9.2 percent (2014: 10.0 percent).