Germany’s
shipping lenders
are preparing for sustained pain as weakening trade and an over-supply of ships
show no signs of easing, industry officials said.
Europe’s
biggest economy was one of the world’s main centres of global ship finance
before the 2008 credit crisis and the five most involved banks still have
around 80 billion euros ($88 billion) of loans outstanding to the
sector, a difficult exposure to manage given tighter scrutiny from bank
regulators.
“The
structural imbalance from the over-supply of transport capacity and low demand
will continue and we don’t expect any encouraging upswing as a result,” shipping
bank DVB Chief Executive Ralf Bedranowsky said on Thursday.
Global
freight rates have fallen as slowing trade spreads through western countries
and more recently to China.
“We
had a great ride for 15 years thanks to China’s economic boom; now, it’s over,”
said Carsten
Wiebers, responsible for ship finance at Ipex, a unit of state
development bank KFW.
“This
is not a short-term dip; we have to prepare for growth rates in world trade
like we had 20 years ago,” Wiebers said.
The
back book of wobbling ship loans has forced lenders such as NordLB,
HSH, Commerzbank and KFW to take writedowns and boost
buffers against portfolios turning bad.
DVB
more than doubled its provisions for credit losses to 142 million euros last
year to cover old shipping loans and new risks in its offshore finance
portfolio.
“The
risk is rising that shipping banks will have to boost provisions and that the
number of non-performing loans will rise,” said Alexander Hendricks, an analyst
at credit rating agency Moody’s.
The
strengthening dollar against the euro was a further threat to European lenders
because a lot of ship financing is booked in the U.S. currency, he said.
Some
shipping specialists could profit from the situation. NordLB and two partners
have formed a joint venture to provide consulting on restructuring of
non-performing ship loans.
There
could be plenty of work. DVB said the large number of vessels still on order
from shippers could play into a rise in distressed sales, bankruptcies and
restructurings.
Nearly
500 new container ships – more than 20 percent of the existing fleet – are due
for delivery by 2018 as owners seek economies of scale and more fuel efficient
ships, DVB said.
To
avoid losses, lenders have focused increasingly on ships with contracts
guaranteeing their use for years into the future.
“We
have become even more selective about our counterparties and projects,” KFW’s
Wiebers said.
“Today
we expect much better credit quality on the part of the shipping companies and
we demand much higher equity capital.”
The
European
Central Bank and German financial watchdog Bafin have
thoroughly scoured the ship portfolios of the country’s lenders, making it
unlikely that big problems still lurk below the surface, said Moody’s analyst
Hendricks.
Still,
some bankers worry their buffers for bad loans may not be high enough.
“I
go to bed every night with this question and I don’t necessarily wake up in the
morning with an answer,” said one bank board member, who declined to be named.
Source:
Reuters (Editing by Andreas Cremer and Susan Thomas), SN-TR.
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