Romania Financial Sector Assessment

Romania’s financial sector has strengthened significantly over the last few years. Effective supervisory measures have helped reduce the high level of non-performing loans (NPLs) from 21.5 percent at its peak in 2013 to 6.4 percent as of December 2...

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Main Authors: World Bank, International Monetary Fund
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/367591532709095860/Romania-Financial-Sector-Assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30221
id okr-10986-30221
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-302212021-05-25T09:16:59Z Romania Financial Sector Assessment World Bank International Monetary Fund SYSTEMIC RISK FINANCIAL REGULATION MACROPRUDENTIAL SETTING BANK SUPERVISION FINANCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING COMBATING THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM AML-CFT CRISIS MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION CAPITAL MARKET INSURANCE HOUSING FINANCE Romania’s financial sector has strengthened significantly over the last few years. Effective supervisory measures have helped reduce the high level of non-performing loans (NPLs) from 21.5 percent at its peak in 2013 to 6.4 percent as of December 2017.However, some vulnerabilities are emerging. Banks’ holdings of domestic sovereign paper have grown large, exposing them to valuation losses in case of an increase in interest rates or sovereign risk spreads. Banks’ indirect exposures to government guarantees through the Prima Casa program further strengthens the sovereign-bank nexus. An increase in interest rates may also negatively impact NPL ratios on banks’ mortgage portfolios, which are growing fast and are at variable rates. The share of foreign exchange (FX) denominated loans and deposits significantly decreased, but remains relatively high, and a large share of corporate borrowers is unhedged. Finally, lending practices of non-bank financial lenders (NBFLs) may lead to loan defaults and reputational risks for the banking sector. As the financial system is small, shocks may further discourage financial intermediation, which is already among the lowest in the European Union (EU). The NBR is transitioning to a risk-based supervisory approach that needs further enhancements. The new Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP) Guidelines of the European Banking Authority (EBA) are still in the initial stages of implementation. The NBR should conduct more risk-focused, banking industry-wide thematic analyses and develop its off-site monitoring tools, such as by conducting bottom up stress tests.Financial intermediation relative to the economy is low and declining.On the demand side, credit needs remain, overall, limited due to low enterprise density, poor health of the enterprise sector, and high number of foreign owned firms (compared to peers). The economic growth had a positive spillover in the enterprise sector, but this did not translate into increased investment activity, despite an unprecedented low interest rate environment. On the supply side, the supply of credit has been constrained by several factors including: i) an acute deterioration of asset quality, particularly among MSMEs, after the crisis, ii) banks’ deleveraging pressures, iii) deficiencies in the credit enabling infrastructures (credit reporting, insolvency), iv) preference of banks for sovereign debt, as well as government guaranteed debt in a context of fiscal expansion, v) lack of depth in the NBFI segment, and vi) declining use of public partial credit guarantees due to operational problems. As a result, access to credit is particularly problematic for certain firm segments that are underserved by the banking sector, including for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), start-ups, the agriculture sector, and in rural areas.Improving financial inclusion may require broader solutions including i) a better use of the Posta Romana network of branches, ii) measures to enable credit unions to expand and offer more financial services while strengthening supervision, iii) the adoption of incentive mechanisms to accelerate the expansion of digital finance solutions, and iv) the promotion of financial inclusion and literacy as well as effective consumer protection mechanisms. 2018-08-15T15:10:17Z 2018-08-15T15:10:17Z 2018-07 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/367591532709095860/Romania-Financial-Sector-Assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30221 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Financial Sector Assessment Program Europe and Central Asia Romania
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic SYSTEMIC RISK
FINANCIAL REGULATION
MACROPRUDENTIAL SETTING
BANK SUPERVISION
FINANCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING
COMBATING THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM
AML-CFT
CRISIS MANAGEMENT
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
CAPITAL MARKET
INSURANCE
HOUSING FINANCE
spellingShingle SYSTEMIC RISK
FINANCIAL REGULATION
MACROPRUDENTIAL SETTING
BANK SUPERVISION
FINANCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING
COMBATING THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM
AML-CFT
CRISIS MANAGEMENT
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
CAPITAL MARKET
INSURANCE
HOUSING FINANCE
World Bank
International Monetary Fund
Romania Financial Sector Assessment
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Romania
description Romania’s financial sector has strengthened significantly over the last few years. Effective supervisory measures have helped reduce the high level of non-performing loans (NPLs) from 21.5 percent at its peak in 2013 to 6.4 percent as of December 2017.However, some vulnerabilities are emerging. Banks’ holdings of domestic sovereign paper have grown large, exposing them to valuation losses in case of an increase in interest rates or sovereign risk spreads. Banks’ indirect exposures to government guarantees through the Prima Casa program further strengthens the sovereign-bank nexus. An increase in interest rates may also negatively impact NPL ratios on banks’ mortgage portfolios, which are growing fast and are at variable rates. The share of foreign exchange (FX) denominated loans and deposits significantly decreased, but remains relatively high, and a large share of corporate borrowers is unhedged. Finally, lending practices of non-bank financial lenders (NBFLs) may lead to loan defaults and reputational risks for the banking sector. As the financial system is small, shocks may further discourage financial intermediation, which is already among the lowest in the European Union (EU). The NBR is transitioning to a risk-based supervisory approach that needs further enhancements. The new Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP) Guidelines of the European Banking Authority (EBA) are still in the initial stages of implementation. The NBR should conduct more risk-focused, banking industry-wide thematic analyses and develop its off-site monitoring tools, such as by conducting bottom up stress tests.Financial intermediation relative to the economy is low and declining.On the demand side, credit needs remain, overall, limited due to low enterprise density, poor health of the enterprise sector, and high number of foreign owned firms (compared to peers). The economic growth had a positive spillover in the enterprise sector, but this did not translate into increased investment activity, despite an unprecedented low interest rate environment. On the supply side, the supply of credit has been constrained by several factors including: i) an acute deterioration of asset quality, particularly among MSMEs, after the crisis, ii) banks’ deleveraging pressures, iii) deficiencies in the credit enabling infrastructures (credit reporting, insolvency), iv) preference of banks for sovereign debt, as well as government guaranteed debt in a context of fiscal expansion, v) lack of depth in the NBFI segment, and vi) declining use of public partial credit guarantees due to operational problems. As a result, access to credit is particularly problematic for certain firm segments that are underserved by the banking sector, including for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), start-ups, the agriculture sector, and in rural areas.Improving financial inclusion may require broader solutions including i) a better use of the Posta Romana network of branches, ii) measures to enable credit unions to expand and offer more financial services while strengthening supervision, iii) the adoption of incentive mechanisms to accelerate the expansion of digital finance solutions, and iv) the promotion of financial inclusion and literacy as well as effective consumer protection mechanisms.
format Report
author World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_facet World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_sort World Bank
title Romania Financial Sector Assessment
title_short Romania Financial Sector Assessment
title_full Romania Financial Sector Assessment
title_fullStr Romania Financial Sector Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Romania Financial Sector Assessment
title_sort romania financial sector assessment
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/367591532709095860/Romania-Financial-Sector-Assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30221
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