Provision of a general nature 2/2014

on setting the countercyclical capital buffer rate for the Czech Republic No. 2/2014

of 4 December 2014

Pursuant to Article 12f(5) of Act No. 21/1992 Coll., on Banks, as amended by Act No. 135/2014 Coll. (hereinafter referred to as the “Act on Banks”), Article 8ac(5) of Act No. 87/1995 Coll., on Credit Unions and Certain Related Measures and on the Amendment of Czech National Council Act No. 586/1992 Coll., on Income Taxes, as amended, as amended by Act No. 135/2014 Coll. (hereinafter referred to as the “Act on Credit Unions”) and Article 9ac(5) of Act No. 256/2004 Coll., on Capital Market Undertakings, as amended by Act No. 135/2014 Coll. (hereinafter referred to as the “Capital Market Undertakings Act”, the Czech National Bank as a competent administrative body hereby issues the following provision of a general nature:

I. Pursuant to Article 12f(3) of the Act on Banks, Article 8ac(3) of the Act on Credit Unions and Article 9ac(3) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act, the countercyclical capital buffer rate for the Czech Republic shall be set at 0% of the total risk exposure amount pursuant to Article 92(3) of Regulation (EU) No. 575/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council.

II. Banks, credit unions and investment firms pursuant to Article 9aa(1) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act shall apply the rate referred to in point I for the purposes of calculating the combined buffer requirement as from 1 January 2016.

Justification

  1. Pursuant to Article 12f(3) of the Act on Banks, Article 8ac(3) of the Act on Credit Unions and Article 9ac(3) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act, the Czech National Bank shall set the countercyclical capital buffer rate for the Czech Republic, taking into account the countercyclical capital buffer guide calculated pursuant to Article 12f(1) and (2) of the Act on Banks, Article 8ac(1) and (2) of the Act on Credit Unions and Article 9ac(1) and (2) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act, the recommendations issued by the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) and any indicators that can identify growth in systemic risk. Pursuant to Article 12f(1) of the Act on Banks, Article 8ac(1) of the Act on Credit Unions and Article 9ac(1) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act, the buffer guide is based on the deviation of the credit-to-GDP ratio from its long-term trend – the credit-to-GDP gap. Pursuant to Article 12f(2) of the Act on Banks, Article 8ac(1) and (2) of the Act on Credit Unions and Article 9ac(1) and (2) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act, when calculating the buffer guide the Czech National Bank shall take into account in particular the credit cycle and growth in loans provided in the Czech Republic, changes in the credit-to-GDP ratio, the specificities of the Czech national economy and the recommendations issued by the ESRB.
  2. In accordance with the ESRB Recommendation1, total credit means the value of all loans provided to the private sector (non-financial corporations, households and non-profit institutions serving households) plus the volume of bonds issued by the domestic private sector. The time series of 1995–2014 and – in line with the ESRB Recommendation – the Hodrick-Prescott filter with a smoothing parameter (?) of 400,000 were used to calculate the long-term trend. The standardised credit-to-GDP ratio was 77.9% and its deviation from the long-term trend 7.3 percentage points in 2014 Q2. These values imply setting the benchmark countercyclical capital buffer rate pursuant to Article 12f(1) and (2) of the Act on Banks, Article 8ac(1) and (2) of the Act on Credit Unions and Article 9ac(1) and (2) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act at 1.75%. In reaction to the ESRB recommendation, however, the Czech National Bank has repeatedly emphasised in its publications (particularly the Financial Stability Report) that the said calculation method is not appropriate for the Czech economy in view of its specificities and so cannot be taken into account in full when deciding on the rate. The specific features of the Czech economy include the limited length of the time series of the credit-to-GDP ratio, structural (non-cyclical) breaks caused by the banking crisis in the late 1990s and trends typical of converging economies. For this reason, when setting the countercyclical capital buffer rate the Czech National Bank prefers to apply an approach based on a wider set of indicators and taking account of the specific features of converging economies rather than applying the above-mentioned mechanical rule.
  3. The estimate of the long-term trend of the credit-to-GDP ratio used to calculate the buffer guide is affected mainly by the fall in loans recorded in the late 1990s and at the start of the 2000s. This was caused by write-offs of non-performing loans from banks’ balance sheets. The Czech National Bank therefore deems it necessary to calculate the additional deviation of the credit-to-GDP ratio from its long-term trend based on a shorter time series. The distortion associated with the fall in loans in the late 1990s can be eliminated by using data for the last ten years only (i.e. since the start of 2004). The deviation of the trend calculated in this way was -2.6 percentage points in 2014 Q2 and implies a zero countercyclical capital buffer rate. At present, this indicator better characterises the position of the Czech economy in the financial cycle.2 Despite this, its values should be regarded only as indicative, and a more comprehensive assessment of the situation based on other relevant indicators should be taken into account when setting the rate.
  4. The overall credit market situation is characterised by muted activity. In September 2014, the annual growth rate of bank loans to non-financial corporations was 0.2% and that to households was 4.7%. Both these figures are well below the ten-year average, and the estimate of future growth in bank lending in Financial Stability Report 2013/2014 does not indicate any risk of excessive credit expansion either. The lending activity of non-bank intermediaries is very low: loans to non-financial corporations rose by 8.2% year on year in 2014 Q2, but this primarily reflected strong falls in the previous two years and base effects. Loans to households are continuing to decrease.
  5. None of the other indicators are at elevated risk levels either. The speed of private sector borrowing relative to income is low by comparison with the pre-crisis period, and total debt service does not represent an excessive burden. Residential property prices were broadly flat in 2013 and are close to their equilibrium values according to the Czech National Bank’s analyses. Despite some signs of a price recovery in the first half of 2014, the Czech National Bank expects only modest growth over the next few years. An aggregate indicator of the financial cycle3 combining the above indicators and taking into account their mutual correlation confirms that the Czech economy is still close to the bottom of the financial cycle and the credit recovery is very slow. Taking into account the additional deviation of the credit-to-GDP ratio from its long-term trend and the other relevant indicators, the value corresponding to the guide for setting the countercyclical capital buffer rate according to the ESRB Recommendation4 is 0%.
  6. Overall, the indicators that can identify growth in credit risk can be assessed as suggesting that the financial cycle in the Czech economy is in a phase of incipient modest recovery. The current credit market situation is not giving rise to over-optimistic expectations and the taking on of excessive credit risk. The current level of the time dimension (cyclical source) of systemic risk is low and does not require the creation of a countercyclical capital buffer for exposures located in the Czech Republic. The Czech National Bank has therefore decided to set the countercyclical capital buffer rate for exposures located in the Czech Republic at 0%. Given the current predictions of future credit growth and developments on the relevant markets – the property market in particular – it will probably not be necessary to apply a non-zero countercyclical capital buffer rate in the next two years.
  7. The institutions shall apply this rate as from 1 January 2016 (see statement II).

Effect

This Provision shall take effect on 15 December 2014.

    Vladimír Tomšík    
Vice-Governor
Jan Frait
 Executive Director, Financial Stability Department 

This provision of a general nature was published on 15 December 2014.


1 Recommendation of the European Systemic Risk Board of 18 June 2014 on guidance for setting countercyclical buffer rates (ESRB/2014/1).
2 See the comparison of the indicators of excessive borrowing and accumulation of risks in Table V.2 (page 98) in Financial Stability Report 2013/2014. 
3 The indicator is described in detail in the article An indicator of the financial cycle in the Czech economy published in Financial Stability Report 2013/2014 (pp. 118–127).
4 Recommendation B(4).