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Posts Tagged ‘south africa’

Banks Asset Recovery May be Delayed by Consumer Debt

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Fitch Ratings says it expects that elevated levels of consumer debt may prolong the recovery of the asset quality of South Africa’s major banks.

Earlier the ratings agency had said the due to the high levels of consumer debt and a difficult operating environment there had been an increase in the amount of consumers who had been applying for a debt review as part of the National Credit Act’s debt review process.

It is estimated by Fitch Ratings that the value of the debt review exposures of the four major South African banks was 21 billion rand during 2010. It was also estimated that 200,000 debt review applications had been received by December 31st 2010 and that there was approximately 7000-8000 new applicants each month.

Due to unforeseen delays the banks have seen their attempts to begin debt recovery of the debt review exposures hampered.

Daniel De Bie, a director in irch’s financial institutions teams said “To minimise the impact of these delays certain banks have proactively used loan restructuring and in certain instances have sought to terminate the debt review process.”

“However, a recent high court ruling on credit providors’ right to terminate the debt review process and a moratorium until the end of June 2011 may further delay banks’ debt collection efforts and negatively effect collateral values.”

Fitch said it believed that the asset quality indicators of the four major South African banks would remain at elevated levels due to the delays.

Credit providers in drive to recover bad debts

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

BANKS and credit providers are stepping up efforts to recover bad debts, even as they start relaxing lending criteria, figures from the National Credit Regulator show.

The number of enquiries lenders made to credit bureaus for the purpose of tracing and debt collection jumped almost 16% in the three months to March to 18,57-million, the latest quarterly credit bureau monitor report shows.

Over the same period, the number of enquiries made as a result of consumers seeking to take out new credit fell almost 5%.

Enquiries to credit bureaus, which store the records of SA’s 18,2-million active borrowers, are made by both consumers and lenders, and the reasons for inquiries include providing sales leads for new credit products, vetting new loan applications, and debt collection and enforcement.

The growth of enquiries for debt enforcement purposes in the three months to March, the fourth straight quarter to show vigorous debt collection-related inquiries, shows lenders are now calling in their loans. “Credit providers are more and more starting to follow up and enforce where they have arrears,” National Credit Regulator CEO Gabriel Davel said yesterday.

Further evidence of this comes from the figures illustrating the deterioration of the South African consumer’s debt profile. The number of people with credit records marked as “impaired” — those with accounts three months or more in arrears, with an adverse listing such as “absconded” or a judgment order against them — rose to 8,37-million, or 46% of all active credit users.

While this suggests a continued deterioration of the sort seen for the past three years, the quarterly decline came from increases in adverse listings as well as judgments and administration orders — moves sparked by debtor action.

The “natural” deterioration of debts that fell into three or more months in arrears — reflecting a failure by debtors to keep paying their obligations on time — actually improved, with this category of debtors improving slightly to 17,2% of the total from 17,3% in the December quarter.

In contrast, adverse listings grew to 17% from 14,6%, and the category for judgments and administration orders rose to 13,7% from 13,3% as a proportion of all debtors.

“It’s not as if the level of arrears or debt stress is deteriorating,” said Mr Davel. “It’s much more the enforcement of action by credit providers.”

Nonetheless, the overall profile of South African consumer debt continued to worsen in the first quarter. The number of people recorded as being in “good standing” — with accounts marked as current or no more than one to two months in arrears — slipped to 54% of the total from 54,7% in the December quarter, to a total 9,84-million people.

The pace of both deterioration of good records and the growth in impaired records was faster in the March quarter than either measure saw in the December quarter. Still, both measures show smaller changes than they did midway through last year, leading Mr Davel to repeat earlier comments that the worst may well be over.

Others repeated the sentiment.

“Nonperforming loans have peaked. Generally, financial services institutions are more bullish about the future,” said David McAlpin, CEO of Cape Town-based PIC Solutions, a credit risk consultancy.

Still, other reports show loans for big-ticket vehicle loans and homeloans are growing more slowly than shorter, unsecured types of credit.

The number of active credit accounts grew in the March quarter to 64,75-million, from 63,94-million in the December quarter. This increase was almost double the increase of 400000 accounts seen in December from September.

This was a sign of debt stress, as cash-strapped consumers took advantage of better credit availability to take out loans to tide themselves over, consultancy Econometrix said in response to yesterday’s report.

Mr Davel disagreed: “Small amounts of credit have grown much more than mortgages or motor vehicle loans. Does that indicate stress? I’m not certain.”

South African Landlords Fall Under Debt Collection Act

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

South African landlords who collect rent arrears have now been placed under the scope of the Debt Collectors Act, according to property management group Trafalgar.

Managing Director of Trafalgar, Andrews Schaefar, said “Landlords battling with late-paying tenants and bodies corporate struggling to retrieve levies can now welcome two recent landmark decisions by the Council for Debt Collectors that clearly rule property managers collecting arrears levies and rentals fall within the scope of the Debt Collectors Act.”

Under the new rulings, all estate agents and property managers who collect rental arrears and levies must be registered with the Council for Debt Collector. This will help regulate any unscrupulous behaviour that may have entered the South African debt collection industry.

“The move has highlighted compliance with the Council for Debt Collectors and associated legislation as being necessary for compliance and transparency,” continued Richard Schaefar.

As a direct result, this move should encourage debtors to improve their individual situation in order to avoid these enforceable penalties.

Schaefer said the Council for Debt Collectors was established to bring clarity to a previously unregulated industry following numerous public complaints laid with the department of justice against debt collectors.

“The Debt Collectors Act provides control over debt collectors and legalises the South African collection system by monitoring their conduct and professionalism and thus promoting a culture of good governance.”

Schaefer said the act worked both ways.

“Tenants who believe they are receiving unfair bias can lay a complaint with the Council and both sides will be heard before a judgment is passed.”

Mr Schaefar then added that a recent decision by the Durban High Court to exclude levies from the National Credit Act debt counselling process was also good news for estate agents and property managers.

“That decision means companies such as Trafalgar do not have to refer to debt counsellors when seeking levies due from owners – and correspondingly that errant owners cannot hide behind debt counselling as an excuse for not paying their bodies corporate levies.”

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