Junk-rated
and oil and gas loans worry U.S. bank regulators
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[November 06, 2015]
By Dan Freed and Lynn Adler
(Reuters) - Banks' exposure to junk-rated
companies and the oil and gas sector remains high, according to an
annual report on loan quality by U.S. bank regulators released Thursday.
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The regulators gave a negative classification to $372.6 billion out
of $3.9 trillion in loans impacted by the review, or 9.5 percent of
the loans. Classified loans increased 9.4 percent from a year
earlier.
While regulators cited progress by banks in improving underwriting
practices, they complained in a press release with the report of
"persistent structural deficiencies found in loan underwriting."
The report could be an early sign of a shift in the credit cycle
toward more conservative lending because of stress among some
borrowers.
Criticism of loan quality in last year's report focused on loans to
junk-rated companies. This year's report added worry about oil and
gas loans. So called "classified" oil and gas loans - ones that
received the three most negative ratings of "substandard,"
"doubtful," and "loss" - surged to 15 percent from just 3.6 percent
a year ago.
"Aggressive acquisition and exploration strategies from 2010 through
2014 led to increases in leverage, making many borrowers more
susceptible to a protracted decline in commodity prices," the
release stated.
The review could force banks to scale back loans to energy
companies. In September the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, which conducted the review with the Federal Reserve Board
and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, met with banks over
the impact of fallen commodity prices on the ability of borrowers to
repay loans.
The "shared national credit review" covers loans made by at least
three or more federally regulated institutions, chiefly banks.
Thursday's report used data banks provided between Dec. 31, 2014 and
March 31, 2015.
The three regulators in 2013 released stricter guidance on leveraged
lending to avert the type of risky lending that led to the mortgage
and financial crises. Thursday's report said "examiners noted
improved compliance" with that guidance.
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J. Paul Forrester, a corporate finance lawyer at Mayer Brown in
Chicago said Thursday's report shows that "excluding oil and gas
loans, the banks appear to be making progress."
Regulators made it clear to banks months ago they would give
heightened attention to loan performance and some banks dented their
earnings by recording additional expenses to bolster reserves
against potential losses.
At JPMorgan Chase & Co CFO Marianne Lake said on the company's Oct.
13 earnings call the bank had already taken large reserves in the
last few quarters. She added "if energy prices stay around these
levels and recover slowly, we're expecting, net, not to have
material incremental reserves in the next quarter."
(Corrects total of classified loans to $372.6 billion from $372.8
billion in second paragraph)
(Reporting by Dan Freed and Lynn Adler in New York; Additional
reporting by Dan Wilchins; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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