XM levert geen diensten aan inwoners van de Verenigde Staten.

NatWest to tap investors to shed loan risk and protect dividends, executives say



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>FOCUS-NatWest to tap investors to shed loan risk and protect dividends, executives say</title></head><body>

By Sinead Cruise

LONDON, Aug 8 (Reuters) -NatWest NWG.L wants to bolster its lending firepower. To do so it plans to cut deals with investors to offload some of its loan risk, to make its capital go further and preserve dividends, executives told Reuters.

The domestically-focused bank, still 19% taxpayer-owned since its 2008 bailout, joins a wave of peers seeking to shed some loan exposure usingbehind-the-scenes deals with investorsthat can trim regulatory demands for capital by hundreds of millions of pounds.

Robert Begbie, CEO of NatWest's Commercial & Institutional division, said significant risk transfer (SRT) transactions, which the bank had also used in the past, would spur new lending and help maintain shareholder payouts.

SRTs enable a bank to shed lending risk to a third party via derivatives or guarantees that offer protection to the lender in the event of losses on a loan.

Bankers are exploring ways to mitigate new Basel regulations that will impose higher risk weightings on certain loans from 2025, forcing lendersto park more capital against those assets and potentially squeezing access to credit for some borrowers.

"Our Commercial & Institutional business consumes the largest amount of capital across our three customer businesses,"
Begbie told Reuters.

"The onus is on us to walk the talk in relation to better capital management activities," he said, explaining the decision to relaunch its SRT programme after a four-year hiatus.

Using an SRT, the bank doesn't dispose of the underlying loans and preserves its relationship with the customer, but crucially, the trade enables the bank to unlock some of the capital tied up against those assets.

Investors who sell this protection to banks get exposure to high-quality loan risk and returns that are typically less volatile than publicly-traded fixed-income securities.

NatWest, formerly known as Royal Bank of Scotland, was forced to embark on a massive restructuring in the years following its 46 billion pound ($58.5 billion) bailout in 2008.

A wave of asset sales left the bank with an abundance of excess capital, which management has steadily reinvested or returned to investors, including the government.

Now, NatWest wants to use SRTs to fuel faster lending growth in Britain, where a new Labour government faces pressure to regenerate a low-growth economy and depleted public purse.

NatWest hiredRob Lloyd from Lloyds Bank LLOY.L late last year to help lead a reboot of its capital management programme, which has drawn in staff from the restructured NatWest Markets -- its securities arm -- to explore how it can maximise the efficiency of its balance sheet.

"We are spending a lot more time thinking about allocation. And we're absolutely looking at how we recycle assets on our book, whether it be via SRTs, via credit insurance, or other capital management tools," Lloyd said.

Currently one of Britain's biggest lenders to small and medium-sized businesses, NatWest's future loan origination activity will not depend on its SRT market activity but it will be "beneficial and supportive," Begbie added.

The executives declined to say how many transfers NatWest aimed to achieve this year or give details on the asset risk shared.


BASEL BOOM

While the latest Basel rules are broadly expected to incentivise more SRT activity in potentially larger deal sizes, some analysts said lenders may find it harder to secure the same quantum of capital relief on certain trades under the new rules.

Regulators must evaluate each proposed transfer of lending risk before approving the capital relief sought by the bank.

"The simple narrative is that Basel is going to increase risk weights - and therefore capital charges - on certain types of assets. And this is pushing banks to be more creative about managing their balance sheets," Andrew South, Head of Structured Finance Research at ratings agency S&P, told Reuters.

"But what you hear much less about is how Basel 3.1 might also introduce challenges to the economics of SRTs," he added, with banks likely needing to pay more to investors to reap the same capital relief.

NatWest's Begbie and Lloyd were however confident in the benefits offered by these tools and rising demand for such assets from pension funds, insurers and private equity houses.

S&P's South said investor demand for SRTs would likely exceed supply, although he declined to offer a prediction on 2024 volumes, on the basis that volumes recorded in 2023 are unclear because the deals aren't public.

Data published in May by the European Central Bank showed lenders under its supervision struck around 317 billion euros ($345.88 billion) of SRTs in the two years to end-2023.

The Bank of England keeps data on SRT volumes confidential.

José Manuel Campa, chairperson of the European Banking Authority (EBA) told Reuters he was aware of some criticism among banks concerning how long it typically took supervisors to sign off on SRTs.

Supervisors are obliged to assess each transfer on its own merits, to "go in, ask questions and that process takes time," he told Reuters in an interview last month.

"From my perspective, banks who really want faster progress in using SRTs to reduce capital requirements should consider coming forward with a standardized product," Campa said.

"That's how to grow this market as well, to have a degree of consistency in your product."

($1 = 0.9165 euros)



($1 = 0.7865 pounds)



Reporting by Sinead Cruise; Editing by Eliza Martinuzzi and Sharon Singleton

</body></html>

Disclaimer: De entiteiten van de XM Group bieden diensten en toegang tot ons online handelsplatform op basis van uitsluitend-uitvoering, waardoor een persoon de beschikbare content op of via de website kan bekijken en/of gebruiken, zonder dat dit is bedoeld voor wijziging of uitbreiding. Dergelijk(e) toegang en gebruik vallen onder: (i) de algemene voorwaarden; (ii) risicowaarschuwingen; en de (iii) volledige disclaimer. Dergelijke content wordt daarom alleen aangeboden als algemene informatie. Wees u er daarnaast vooral van bewust dat de inhoud op ons online handelsplatform geen verzoek of aanbieding omvat om transacties op de financiële markten uit te voeren. Het beleggen op welke financiële markt dan ook vormt een aanzienlijk risico voor uw vermogen.

Alle materialen die op ons online handelsplatform worden gepubliceerd zijn bedoeld voor educatieve/informatieve doeleinden en omvatten geen – en moeten niet worden beschouwd als het bevatten van – financieel, vermogensbelastings- of handelsadvies en aanbevelingen, of een overzicht van onze handelsprijzen, of een aanbod of aanvraag van een transactie in financiële instrumenten of ongevraagde financiële promoties voor u.

Alle content van derden, alsmede content die is voorbereid door XM, zoals opinies, nieuws, onderzoeken, analyses, prijzen en andere informatie of koppelingen naar externe websites op deze website worden aangeboden op een 'zoals-ze-zijn'-basis, als algemene marktcommentaren, en vormen geen beleggingsadvies. Voor zover dat content wordt beschouwd als beleggingsonderzoek, moet u zich ervan bewust zijn en accepteren dat de content niet bedoeld was en niet is voorbereid in overeenstemming met de wettelijke vereisten die zijn opgesteld om de onafhankelijkheid van beleggingsonderzoek te bevorderen en als zodanig onder de geldende wetgeving en richtlijnen moet worden beschouwd als marketingcommunicatie. Zorg ervoor dat u onze Mededeling over niet-onafhankelijk beleggingsonderzoek en risicowaarschuwing in verband met de voorgaande informatie doorneemt en begrijpt; die kunt u hier lezen.

Risicowaarschuwing: Uw vermogen loopt risico. Hefboomproducten zijn mogelijk niet voor iedereen geschikt. Lees onze informatie over risico's.