Relentless rise of consumer debt in Russia fuels bubble fears for some
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[August 15, 2019] By
Darya Korsunskaya, Elena Fabrichnaya and Tatiana Voronova
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Natalia Leontyeva, a
Siberian sales manager, bought a second hand car in 2013 with a loan
worth about four monthly salaries. She now owes the equivalent of at
least four years of earnings, one of a growing number of Russians
struggling with debt.
"You pay one month's instalment, then the second. But then something
happens again and it all piles up," she said by phone from the city of
Novosibirsk in Siberia where she works at a steelworks.
After five years of shrinking real incomes, many Russians are borrowing
to make ends meet or even just to pay off their creditors - and the
issue is climbing up the political agenda.
"A third of those people taking loans already owe more than their annual
income," Maxim Oreshkin, Russia's economy minister, told Reuters. "This
is an issue of financial education, a debt trap, in some cases worse
than gambling."
For Russia as a whole, the burden of total household debt is relatively
low, partly because only 5.5 million of its 147 million people have
mortgages.
But interest rates on personal loans are high and more than half of
Russians surveyed by state pollster VTsIOM said they had debts. For a
significant number, they are a major concern.
Some 2.5 million people earning up to 20,000 roubles ($303.09) a month,
which is less than half the average wage, spend more than half of that
on loan repayments, the National Association of Professional Collection
Agencies estimates.
On Wednesday, President Vladimir Putin discussed consumer debt with
Andrey Kostin, head of second-biggest state-run bank VTB <VTBR.MM>,
telling him in televised comments, "people should not be pushed to some
kind of extreme state".
Kostin told Putin he understood the problem and that banks should wear a
"human face" when dealing with its clients.
Their exchange highlighted the sensitivity of the problem for Putin,
whose popularity ratings have slipped since he was reelected by an
overwhelming majority last year.
Moscow is in the grip of protests over the exclusion of opposition
candidates from a local election and sporadic protests over issues
ranging from waste disposal to unwanted construction have flared
elsewhere.
TIGHTENING
The central bank has tightened lending rules in recent years, and raised
the amount of money banks need to set aside to cover loan losses.
This has moderated the potential fallout for the financial system but
Oreshkin said borrowers are still exposed.
"In consumer lending, there is high indebtedness and ... it is growing
at a rate far higher than the nominal increases in incomes," he said.
Outstanding loans were 16.3 trillion roubles ($248 billion) as of early
July, up from 10.6 trillion five years ago, according to central bank
data.
And while the rate of consumer lending increase has dropped from a 60%
year-on-year peak in 2012, it was still over 20% last year despite the
central bank's attempts to rein it in.
Consumer lending growth rate has currently stabilized at 24-25% in
annual terms, the central bank said in a response to a request to
comment from Reuters.
"A fast increase in... outstanding consumer debt is leading to a rising
debt burden for households," it said. "This increases vulnerability of
the financial system but the size of this lending segment does not
pose... a threat, either for the banking sector's stability, or for the
economy."
Olga Ulyanova, an analyst with Moody's rating agency in Moscow, praised
the central bank's measures but said more actions might be needed
including a possible ban on lending to highly indebted borrowers.
"The central bank's measures are timely and preemptive," she said. "But
it will have to continue the policy of tightening as the current
measures are not sufficient to normalize the segment's growth rate."
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People walk past an office of a local bank in Moscow, Russia August
14, 2019. The signboard reads "Deposits. Loans". Picture taken
August 14, 2019. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
The central bank said in its response that it will raise risk requirements again
for consumer loans in October, under which banks will have to evaluate a
borrower's existing debt before issuing a new loan.
Oreshkin has also said there was no risk for the financial system's stability as
banks have enough provisions while adding, in comments to Russian media last
month, that there was a bubble in consumer lending when it came to certain
households.
The economy ministry is working on proposals to simplify the process of
individuals declaring themselves bankrupt and on changing the criteria for
people to claim insolvency based on income left over after loan repayments, he
told Reuters.
"POINT OF NO RETURN"
Russia's household debt to gross domestic product ratio is 14%, compared with
around 30% in Czech Republic and Poland and 75% in Sweden, Moody's said.
Non-performing loans, or outstanding debt by individuals that is not being
serviced for more than 90 days, stood at 797 billion roubles, or 5% of the total
retail loans held by banks, as of July 1, according to the central bank. These
loans are provisioned by over 90%, it said.
But almost one in five new loans are being spent on servicing existing debt and
more than 30% of consumer loans issued in January-March 2019 went to people
already spending more than half their income on debt servicing, Moody's said,
citing central bank data.
This means the lending is not fully filtering into growth in the economy, which
is projected to grow at 1-1.5% this year versus 2.3% last year, under pressure
from drop in oil prices and sanctions since 2014 over Russia's annexation of
Crimea.
One high-ranking government financial official who asked not to be named due to
the sensitivity of the issue said that when it came to those already spending
large sums in debt servicing, "the point of no return has been passed already".
"The most dreadful thing is not that banks or the central bank do not realize
there is an issue, but that people with salaries of 30-40,000 roubles have to
spend 20,000 on servicing their debt," the official said.
The number of bankruptcies has grown from up to 20,000 in 2016, the year after a
new private bankruptcy law came in, to almost 44,000 in 2018. It grew by around
29,000 in the first six months of this year, a 52% rise year-on-year, according
to Russian official registry Fedresurs.
Consumer lending accounts for over a tenth of total loans at Russia's top banks,
state-owned Sberbank <SBER.MM> and VTB <VTBR.MM>, while for private TCS Group <TCSq.L>
consumer lending forms its core business.
Mikhail Matovnikov, chief analyst with Sberbank, said that consumer lending
growth is already slowing down and does not pose systemic risks.
VTB said that consumer loans are one of the most profitable businesses for the
bank. But it said that VTB has a high quality consumer loan portfolio so there
is no rise in non-performing loans in this area.
"Our bank has had risk processes for a long time already which do not allow
loans to highly-indebted borrowers," VTB said in a written reply to Reuters. TCS
did not reply to a request for a comment.
(Additional reporting by Anna Rzhevkina; writing and additional reporting by
Andrey Ostroukh; editing by Katya Golubkova, Andrew Osborn, Carmel Crimmins and
Philippa Fletcher)
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