Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:16

Banking system robust to severe dairy stress test

Written by 
The banking system is robust to a severe dairy stress test. The banking system is robust to a severe dairy stress test.

The banking system is robust to a severe dairy stress test.

So says a Bulletin article 'Summary of the dairy portfolio stress testing exercise' published today by the Reserve Bank.

Low global milk prices are generating significant financial pressure for dairy farmers, with around one half of the dairy sector currently experiencing a second consecutive season of operating losses.

Five banks that are the largest dairy sector lenders participated in a stress test run by the Reserve Bank in late 2015. Two scenarios were tested, with scenario one assuming that the dairy payout recovers to $5.25/kgMS by the 2017/18 season and a fall in dairy land prices of 20%. Under the second scenario, the dairy payout was assumed to fall to $3/kgMS in 2015/16 and remain below $5/kgMS until the 2019/20 season with a fall in land prices of 40%.

Head of macro financial Bernard Hodgetts says both scenarios assume the dairy payout remains lower for longer than was assumed in the economic projections contained in the Reserve Bank's March Monetary Policy Statement.

"On average, banks reported losses under the two scenarios ranging between 3 to 8% of their total dairy sector exposures," says Hodgetts.

"Bank lending to the dairy sector stands at around $38 billion, which is approximately 10% of the banking system's total lending. We would expect losses of the order seen in the stress scenarios to be absorbed largely through lower bank earnings rather than through an erosion of bank capital."

The test results suggested that in the shorter term, banks would increase their dairy lending in order to support existing borrowers facing negative cash flow, before facing a longer term rise in loan losses if there were a prolonged dairy sector downturn, the article says.

Stress testing is an important part of the Reserve Bank's prudential supervision of banks and has two main objectives:

1. helping the Reserve Bank identify and assess financial system risks, and

2. helping the banks to assess risks and the adequacy of capital buffers.

Senior management of participating banks are currently considering the results of the tests and any actions that they might need to take as a result of insights gleaned from the results. Each bank will also discuss the implications of the tests with supervisors from the Reserve Bank.

More like this

Keep it up

OPINION: The good fight against "banking wokery" continues with a draft bill to scrap the red tape forcing banks and financial institutions to make climate-related disclosures, by repealing Part 7A of the Financial Markets Conduct Act 2013.

Bagrie bags banks

OPINION: Noted economist and self-promoter Cameron Bagrie took one look at KPMG's recently released Financial Institutions Performance Survey on banks and zeroes in one key number that suggests banks are so risk averse in this country that they are probably stifling growth and innovation.

Featured

Big return on a small investment

Managing director of Woolover Ltd, David Brown, has put a lot of effort into verifying what seems intuitive, that keeping newborn stock's core temperature stable pays dividends by helping them realise their full genetic potential.

Editorial: Sensible move

OPINION: The Government's decision to rule out changes to Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT) that would cost every farmer thousands of dollars annually, is sensible.

National

Machinery & Products

» Latest Print Issues Online

Milking It

Cuddling cows

OPINION: Years of floods and low food prices have driven a dairy farm in England's northeast to stop milking its…

Bikinis in cowshed

OPINION: An animal activist organisation is calling for an investigation into the use of dairy cows in sexuallly explicit content…

» Connect with Dairy News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter