of 28 November 2019
on setting the countercyclical capital buffer rate for the Czech Republic No. IV/2019
Pursuant to Article 12o(5) of Act No. 21/1992 Coll., on Banks, as amended by Act No. 375/2015 Coll., (hereinafter referred to as the “Act on Banks”) and Article 8al(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. 375/2015 Coll. (hereinafter referred to as the “Act on Credit Unions”), the Czech National Bank as a competent administrative body hereby issues the following provision of a general nature:
I. Pursuant to Article 12o(3) of the Act on Banks and Article 8al(3) of the Act on Credit Unions, the countercyclical capital buffer rate for the Czech Republic shall be set at 2.00% 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 and credit unions shall apply the rate referred to in point I for the purposes of calculating the combined buffer requirement as from 1 January 2021.
Justification
- Pursuant to Article 12o(3) of the Act on Banks and Article 8al(3) of the Act on Credit Unions, the Czech National Bank (hereinafter referred to as the “CNB”) shall set the countercyclical capital buffer rate for the Czech Republic, taking into account the countercyclical capital buffer guide calculated pursuant to Article 12o(1) and (2) of the Act on Banks and Article 8al(1) and (2) of the Act on Credit Unions, the recommendations issued by the European Systemic Risk Board (hereinafter referred to as the “ESRB”) and indicators which may imply growth in systemic risk.
- Pursuant to Article 12o(1) of the Act on Banks, Article 8al(1) of the Act on Credit Unions and Article 9al(1) of the Capital Market Undertakings Act, the calculation of the buffer guide is based on the deviation of the credit-to-GDP ratio from its long-term trend – the credit-to-GDP gap. The credit-to-GDP ratio was 89.1% and the relevant deviation from the long-term trend -3.1 percentage points in 2019 Q2.[1] This value pursuant to Article 12o(1) of the Act on Banks and Article 8al(1) of the Act on Credit Unions corresponds to a benchmark countercyclical capital buffer rate of 0%. The additional gap,[2] which is based on the ESRB Recommendation (section B, Article 2) and better reflects the specificities of the Czech economy, was 1.0 percentage point in 2019 Q2 and implies a benchmark rate of 0%.
- In reaction to the ESRB recommendation, the CNB has repeatedly emphasised in its publications (particularly the Financial Stability Report) that it does not regard the size of the gaps referred to in paragraph 2 as a reliable guide for determining the position of the domestic economy in the financial cycle and setting the rate. The CNB prefers an approach based on a comprehensive assessment of indicators identifying growth in systemic risks under Article 12o(3) of the Act on Banks and Article 8al(3) of the Act on Credit Unions.[3]
- The movement of the domestic economy in the growth phase of the financial cycle did not continue in 2019 Q2. However, the domestic economy is close to the peak of the current financial cycle. The financial cycle indicator fell somewhat for the second consecutive quarter, owing mainly to declining credit growth in the household sector in the case of loans for house purchase. Growth in credit to non-financial corporations also decreased. By contrast, year-on-year growth in consumer credit to households increased.[4] The rate of property price growth remained elevated and continued to exceed the growth in households’ incomes. In line with this, the overvaluation of apartment prices increased slightly at the end of 2019 Q2 and was between 15% and 20% according to CNB analyses.[5] Despite slower cyclical risk-taking, banks’ balance sheets still contain increased risks accepted in the current growth phase of the financial cycle, risks that may potentially result in high credit losses in the future. The prudential estimate of unexpected credit losses in the current phase of the financial cycle is CZK 25 billion (around 1% of total risk exposure according to Article 92(3) of the CRR in 2019 Q2). Persisting favourable financial conditions accompanied by strong wage growth may foster a further upward shift in the financial cycle. Favourable economic developments have been echoed in the perceptions and pricing of credit risks by the banking sector. The ratio of asset impairment losses to total loans has been around zero for some time now and the ratio of provisions to total loans is steadily decreasing. The capital requirements and derived risk weights of loans to households for house purchase and consumption in banks applying the IRB approach have decreased year on year due to favourable cyclical developments. A return of the risk weights of the largest credit segments to the levels observed at the start of the expansionary phase of the financial cycle[6] would mean an increase in the capital requirement in absolute terms of around CZK 25.4 billion (about 1% of total risk exposure according to Article 92(3) of the CRR in 2019 Q2). This might mean on the aggregate level that the banking sector is failing to take the actual level of credit risk sufficiently into account in the current phase of the financial cycle. If these conditions were to last for an extended period, they would lead to a sharp decline in the banking sector’s resilience. One of the implications of the switch to the IFRS 9 accounting standard also remains an additional source of vulnerability. IFRS 9 is supposed to be beneficial to financial stability from the long-term perspective. Unlike the previous IAS 39 standard, IFRS 9 creates conditions for early and sufficient loan loss provisioning. However, the results of the macro stress tests of banks published in Financial Stability Report 2017/2018 support the view that IFRS 9 may have a significant effect in the form of a rapid and sharp pass-through of an adverse situation to capital in certain conditions. The overall assessment of the position of the economy in the financial cycle, taking account of vulnerability indicators, and the quantification of risks accumulated in the banking sector imply a need to create a countercyclical capital buffer for exposures located in the Czech Republic. However, the situation currently does not require a reaction in the form of a change in the buffer rate.
- Based on the above assessment, the CNB Bank Board has decided to set the countercyclical capital buffer rate at 2.00%.[7] With regard to the assessment of the position of the domestic economy in the financial cycle, the CCyB rate can be expected to stay the same for the near future.
- Pursuant to Article 12x(1) of the Act on Bank and Article 8au(1) of the Act on Credit Unions, this provision of a general nature is announced only in a manner facilitating remote access and takes effect on the day of its publication.
Effect
This Provision shall take effect on 29 November 2019.
Tomáš Nidetzký Deputy Governor |
Jan Frait Executive Director, Financial Stability Department |
This provision of a general nature was published on 29 November 2019.
[1] In accordance with ESRB Recommendation 2014/1 (Recommendation of the European Systemic Risk Board of 18 June 2014 on guidance for setting countercyclical buffer rates), 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 Q1–2019 Q2 and the Hodrick-Prescott filter with a smoothing parameter (?) of 400,000 are used to calculate the long-term trend of the credit-to-GDP ratio. The time series of 1995 Q1–2019 Q2 and the Hodrick-Prescott filter with a smoothing parameter (?) of 400,000 are used to calculate the long-term trend of the credit-to-GDP ratio.
[2] The additional gap – the expansionary credit gap – is calculated as the difference between the current ratio of bank loans to gross value added of the private non-financial sector and the minimum level of this ratio achieved in the past eight quarters.
[3] The approach of the Czech National Bank to setting the countercyclical buffer rate is presented in the thematic article Hájek J., Frait J. and Plašil M. (2017): The Countercyclical Capital Buffer in the Czech Republic, Financial Stability Report 2016/2017. Minor revisions of this approach are regularly published in the Financial Stability Report and Risks to Financial Stability and Their Indicators.
[4] The annual growth rates of bank loans provided to households for house purchase and for consumption were both 7.2% in September 2019. Loans to non-financial corporations increased by 3.3% year on year in September 2019.
[5] The CNB uses two approaches to assess the overvaluation of residential property: macroprudential and valuation (for details see the thematic article on financial stability 1/2019).
[6] According to CNB analyses, the Czech economy entered an expansionary phase of the financial cycle in 2015 Q4.
[7] Institutions shall apply a countercyclical capital buffer rate of 2.00% of the total risk exposure for the purposes of calculating the combined buffer requirement as from 1 July 2020. In line with provisions of a general nature issued earlier, institutions shall apply a buffer rate of 1.75% from 1 January 2020 to 30 June 2020. Institutions shall apply a buffer rate of 1.50% for the purposes of calculating the combined buffer requirement until 31 December 2019.