ESM warns Cypriot banks of quick fixes

The European Stability Mechanism (ESM) warns Cyprus that despite a recent decline in non-performing loans (NPL), the banking sector remains vulnerable due to weak profitability and a still high NPL ratio.

In a 2017 report that was recently published, ESM identifies a few key problem areas for Cyprus’s banking sector, despite banks having at their disposal necessary legal tools to reduce NPLs.

The report criticizes Cypriot banks for not properly pursuing the reduction of bad loans, even though the necessary legal frameworks aiming at reducing NPLs are now in place, adding that they seem to be inefficient and little used.

“Instead, banks are more and more in favor of offloading impaired assets from their balance sheets, mostly via debt-to-asset swaps, which deliver NPL reduction in the short-run but leave banks with significant exposure to the real estate sector,” the report says.

The report takes note of a number of achievements, with post-crisis Cyprus being one of the fastest growing economies in the euro area last year.

But it also says that a recent decline in unemployment does not put Cyprus out of the red as it is still high compared to other parts of Europe.

The government’s efforts to cut funding costs was also noted in the report, along with positive economic conditions and fiscal consolidation, all of which brought about more favorable financial market terms.

ESM praised Cyprus for repaying parts of its loans and dropping the debt-to-GDP ratio below 100 percent in 2017 from 107.4 percent in 2016.

Cyprus’s ability to repay earlier than expected, which was widely credited to Finance Minister Harris Georgiades’s agenda, showed that the positive fiscal and economic situation improved the country’s ability to meet loan service payment terms.

But the pace of reforms has slowed down, the report added, in particular those related to the public and justice administrations.

Source: ekathimerini.com