Breakdown of trust in financial system deepens crisis in
Lebanon
Send a link to a friend
[November 13, 2019] By
Tom Arnold
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanese student Fatima
Jaber's family is struggling to pay off multiple loans with double-digit
interest rates.
Even before the start of protests that have forced out Lebanon's prime
minister, her confidence was fading in a financial system long regarded
as a pillar of stability.
But now, like many Lebanese, she thinks the system is broken.
The loss of trust is eroding liquidity in the banking sector, increasing
concerns that banks may not be able to help the government fund high
budget and current account deficits. One of the world's most indebted
countries, Lebanon has a public debt equal to about 150% of its gross
domestic product.
"We need a change to the system because everyone has at least one loan
from the bank and the rates are very high and we can't pay them," said
Jaber, 22, as she and a small crowd protested outside the central bank
in the capital, Beirut.
Dollar loans have to be repaid in the same currency, which is especially
difficult because there is a hard currency squeeze in Lebanon. With big
banks' websites showing the annual interest on some loans is about 27%,
any people are in dire straits.
Central bank governor Riad Salameh sought to ease concerns on Monday,
saying the bank had a usable foreign cash reserve of $30 billion and
total assets of $38 billion.
The central bank has taken steps to protest depositors by ensuring no
bank would fail and will seek to lower interest rates through liquidity
management, he said.
But the imposition by banks of controls on dollar withdrawals and
transfers overseas has failed to rebuild confidence.
Bankers say customer deposits have continued to dwindle and are
estimated to have dipped by at least $8 billion since August, according
to Institute of International Finance's chief MENA economist Garbis
Iradian.
Giyas Gokkent, at JPMorgan Securities, said reserves were high enough to
ensure Lebanon could maintain its peg to the U.S dollar.
But there are still worrying signs.
"The net foreign position of banks is declining rapidly," said an
international banker who declined to be identified because of the
sensitivity of the situation.
"This, the ad hoc approach to imposing capital controls and the erosion
of their capital buffers means banks will not be able to attract
deposits or credit lines and therefore will be less and less able to
fund the government's current account deficit, piling pressure on
central bank reserves."
[to top of second column] |
A protester throws a tomato at Lebanon's central bank during a
demonstration in Beirut, Lebanon November 11, 2019. REUTERS/Andres
Martinez Casares/File Photo
LIFEBLOOD
The protests that have swept Lebanon for weeks are fueled by anger at the
establishment and perceived corruption but lack of faith in the financial system
is also an important factor.
The confidence of the Lebanese diaspora has also waned, with bankers saying
capital inflows, already faltering since their 2014 peak, have fallen further in
recent weeks over fears of economic collapse.
"No sensible or normal person will be transferring money to Lebanon in the
current circumstances," said Hani Salem, a British-Lebanese financial sector
consultant working in Britain.
Capital inflows have in the past acted as lifeblood to banks and the government.
But the funneling of dollar liquidity from banks to the central bank to bridge
the government's funding gap - a process called "financial engineering" - has
also broken.
Salameh said liquidity management was needed, with banks able to borrow dollars
at 20% interest to secure depositors' needs on condition that such funds were
not sent abroad.
Farouk Soussa, senior economist at Goldman Sachs, said the banks' use of
extraordinary measures to reduce foreign exchange outflows and "regulatory
forbearance" would allow them to continue operating under the current
circumstances.
"So long as this is the case, banks will remain solvent," he said.
But Moody's Investors Service and Fitch Ratings have downgraded Lebanon's
largest banks further into junk territory, and a local banker said some
international correspondent banks were now more wary of providing dollar
liquidity.
Two bankers also doubted the ability of lenders to meet a target set by the
regulator of raising their Common Equity Tier 1 capital - an important measure
of financial strength - by 10% by the end of the year through cash injections.
(Editing by Timothy Heritage)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |