Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Macroeconomic Developments in Serbia June 2017 Inflation Has Been Moving Within the Target Tolerance Band From the Beginning of the Year Inflation movements at the beginning of 2017 driven by a small number of products Chart 1 CPI developments (y-o-y rates, in %) 16 Inflation will continue moving within the target tolerance band Chart 2 Inflation projection (from May 2017 IR) (y-o-y rates, in %) 7 CPI Inflation CPI excl. Food, Energy, Alcohol and Tobacco (Core Inf.) 6 14 5 12 4 10 3 8 2 6 3.5 4 2 1 0 2.2 0 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 • Movement of inflation from the beginning of the year was mainly driven by the increase in energy prices due to the growth in world prices of oil, and by the higher than expected seasonal growth in prices of unprocessed foods (fruits, vegetables and fresh meat), mostly because of the effects of cold weather. • Core inflation stayed low, amounting to 2.2% in May. The slight increase relative to end-2016 was due to higher prices of mobile phone services, which is also due to the effects of one-off factors. • Medium-term inflation expectations of the financial sector are anchored within the target tolerance band. -1 -2 3 6 2015 9 12 3 6 2016 9 12 3 6 2017 9 12 3 6 2018 9 12 3 2019 • We expect that inflation will continue to move within the target tolerance band until the end of the projection horizon, with the expected drop to the 3% target at the beginning of 2018. • The main inflationary impact in the forthcoming period will come from a gradual increase in domestic aggregate demand and inflation abroad, while the high base for petroleum product prices will act as a damper. • The risks to the projected inflation path are symmetrical and associated primarily with developments in the global financial and commodity markets. 2 GDP Growth is Gaining Momentum Diversified and export-oriented growth continues economic Chart 3 GDP developments (seasonally adjusted, Q1 2006=100) Investments in export-oriented sectors – the main driver of GDP growth in the medium term Chart 4 GDP growth projection (from May 2017 IR) (y-o-y rates, in %) 7 118 6 116 5 4 114 3 2 112 1 110 0 -1 108 -2 -3 106 -4 -5 104 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 • In 2016 GDP recorded 2.8% growth, led by net exports, investments and consumption recovery. • Positive trends continued this year as well, with 90% of the economy, and above all manufacturing, recording growth being in line with the projection. • Temporary slowdown in economic activity was primarily a consequence of adverse weather conditions, and as these effects passed economic and foreign trade activity recovered. This trend will continue owing to a more favourable outlook for euro area growth and increasing profitability of the Serbian economy. IV 2014 II IV 2015 II IV 2016 II IV 2017 II IV 2018 • In the coming period, GDP growth is expected to step up, reaching 3.0% this year and 3.5% in 2018, while retaining a favourable growth structure. • Growth acceleration is owed to macroeconomic stability, improved business environment, higher government capital spending, effects of past monetary policy easing, implementation of structural reforms and demand recovery. • Major IFIs and the European Commission also gave a positive assessment of the growth dynamics and composition of Serbian GDP. 3 Improved Business Environment Resulted in Strong FDI Inflow Structural reforms and the business and investment environment have attracted high FDI inflow… Chart 5 Net FDI (EUR bln) Chart 6 FDI composition by sector (% of inflow) 3.5 3.0 100 9.9% 8.6% of GDP 2.5 …which is well-diversified and concentrated into export-oriented sectors 21 24 17 6 18 19 80 7.4% 6.7% 60 5.4% 5.5% 2.0 3.8% 1.5 19 19 23 20 4.4% 4.3% 40 3.7% 10 14 35 9 21 3.8% 2.4% 1.0 20 11 37 34 26 0.5 17 2.5 2.5 2.1 1.1 3.3 0.8 1.3 1.2 1.8 1.9 1.6 1.6 0 0.0 2005-2008 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017* 2018* Other 2009-2012 Construction & real estate 2013-2015 Finance Trade 2016 Manufacturing * NBS forecast • In the four months of 2017, net FDI inflow stood at EUR 634.1 mln (+6.4% y-o-y). FDI is still predominantly concentrated in tradable sectors. • Net FDI projection for 2017 is cautious and stands at EUR 1.6 bn. • Improvement of the business environment is confirmed by the World Bank Doing Business list, where Serbia is ranked among the ten most-improved countries. • Since the crisis, and particularly in the last four years, FDIs are project diversified and mostly directed to exportoriented sectors. • Within manufacturing, most FDI inflows went to the production of basic metals, food products, motor vehicles, chemicals, pharmaceutical and rubber and plastic products. • FDI inflows are increasingly diversified by the region of origin as well, with a greater share of countries from the Asia Pacific and Middle East regions, alongside the EU. 4 Reduction in External Imbalances Strong and well-diversified export growth Further narrowing of the CAD in the coming period Chart 7 Exports and imports (seasonally adjusted, 2008=100) 220 200 Exports, lhs Chart 8 Current account deficit and remittances (% share in GDP) 90% 25 CAD Remittances Inflow Imports, lhs X/M coverage (12M MA), rhs 80% 20 21.2 180 160 18.6 70% 15 10.4 140 120 60% 10 50% 8.2 8.3 7.8 6.8 6.0 6.1 80 40% 1 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 • In the four months of 2017, goods exports and imports grew 8.5% and 12.7% y-o-y, respectively, while exports-toimports ratio stood at 78.1%. Higher imports growth was led by the higher imports of capital and reproduction goods, as well as energy due to bad weather and higher oil price. • Exports growth is still high, diversified and in line with our projection. It is led by manufacturing exports which grew 11.8% y-o-y, with nearly all branches recording growth (19 out of 23). • Largest positive contribution to exports growth came from strong (more than 50% y-o-y) growth in exports of basic metals. 8.5 7.9 7.9 11.6 6.6 5 8.1 10.9 6.8 100 60 10.0 8.9 4.7 4.0 4.0 7.5 3.6 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017* 2018* forecast *NBS • In 2016, CAD continued to improve – declining to 4.0% of GDP. This year we expect CAD share in GDP at the same level. • The ongoing investment cycle (supported by an improved business environment, favourable financial conditions and lower risk premium) will contribute to export growth and a mild reduction in the share of CAD in GDP in 2017 and 2018, despite the expected oil price hike. • In the medium term, we expect FDI inflows to remain more than sufficient to cover the CAD. 5 Sustained Improvement of Fiscal Position Significant fiscal adjustment as of 2015 supported by IMF arrangement yielded betterthan-expected results… Chart 9 Fiscal revenues, expenditures and result (% share in GDP) 55 50 Chart 10 Public debt (central government) Primary balance, rhs Fiscal balance, rhs Revenues, lhs Expenditures, lhs 8 6 4 35 -1.3 Internal, lhs 70 % of GDP, rhs 50 8 40 6 30 -4 4 20 -6 2 10 -8 0 -2 -2.6 -4.4 -3.7 -4.6 -4.8 -5.5 overall balance: 30 14 in % of GDP 80 10 0 -1.9 External, lhs 60 2 45 EUR bn 16 12 1.2 40 …resulting in a decline of public debt-to-GDP ratio in 2016 already, which will continue in the coming years -6.8 -6.6 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q1 • The deficit declined cumulatively by 5.3pp in 2015/16 (outperforming IMF SBA target by 3.4pp in 2016) and the fiscal balance switched to surplus (1.2% of GDP) in Q1 2017. • The first year of the consolidation programme was based on expenditure-side measures (share of expenditures in GDP dropped 2.5pp in 2015). • Fiscal improvement since early 2016 was driven primarily by higher revenues, supported by improved collection of all tax revenue items as well as pickup of economic growth. • On the expenditure side, further savings this year are observed on the wage and pension bill. 0 Q1 2013 Q3 Q1 2014 Q3 Q1 2015 Q3 Q1 2016 Q3 Q1 2017 • The public debt-to-GDP ratio declined in 2016, one year earlier than initially projected. • Central government debt amounted to EUR 24.2 bln (67.7% of projected 2017 GDP) at end-April 2017. • Measures to continue the structural adjustment include reforms of public enterprises and rightsizing of the public sector, as well as further improvements to the efficiency of the Tax Administration. 6 Monetary Policy has Been Significantly Eased Since 2013 Reduction in the key policy rate and consequent reduction in private sector interest rates Chart 11 Interest rates (y-o-y rates, in %) 25 Chart 12 Reserve requirement ratios (in %) Private Sector* (3 months moving average) 50 23 21 Monetary policy easing was also achieved through a reduction in the FX required reserve Policy Rate RSD <2y 40 19 30 15 13 9 29.0 26.0 22.0 9.2 20 19.0 20.0 13.0 7 5 FX >2y RSD >2y 17 11 FX <2y 10 4.0 3 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 *weighted interest rate on non-indexed RSD loans (up to September 2010 the data was exclusively used for research purposes of NBS) • Тhe NBS Executive Board decided to keep the key policy rate at 4.0%. The decision was made having in mind inflation factors, the effects of past monetary easing, and expectations that inflation will continue to move within the target tolerance band in the coming period. • The Board considers the international environment is still fraught with uncertainties as to the developments in international financial markets (largely due to diverging monetary policies of the leading central banks) and commodity markets (particularly oil market, which is under the impact of strengthened geopolitical tensions). 5.0 0 0.0 1 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 • In order to support lending activity, the NBS eased monetary conditions through the required reserves. • Since September 2015, the NBS cut FX RR ratio by 6 pp (to the level of 20/13% for liabilities up to/over 2Y maturity), thereby releasing banks’ credit potential by app. EUR 730 mln (o/w app. 2/3 in foreign currency and 1/3 in RSD). • In Маy 2017, RR amounted to EUR 1.6 bln and RSD 150.3bln. 7 Fall in Interest Rates is Supporting the Recovery of Lending Activity Interest rates on dinar loans have declined significantly over the last three years Chart 13 Interest rates on loans– new business (3 months moving average, in %) 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 We expect economic recovery and lower costs of financing to remain the main drivers of bank lending Chart 14 Bank lending to enterprises and households (y-o-y rates, constant exchange rate 30 Sept 2014 , in %) 11 25 10 20 9 15 8 7 10.8 11.6 10 4.0 5 6 5.7 5 4 4.4 3 3.2 2 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Dinar loans to enterprises - l.h.s Dinar loans to households - l.h.s Eur-indexed loans to enterprises - r.h.s Eur-indexed loans to households - r.h.s • Monetary policy easing from May 2013 (by 7.75 pp) was the main driver of the strong fall in dinar lending rates to enterprises and households (by 10.7 pp and 9.6 pp respectively up to April 2017). • In April, interest rates on new dinar loans stood at 5.7% for corporates and 10.9% for households. • Monetary easing by the ECB, as well as a fall in country risk premia contributed to the fall in EUR-indexed lending rates. 0 -1.5 -5 -10 -15 1 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 5 7 9111 3 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Enterprises Households Total • Domestic lending rose by 4.0% y-o-y in April 2017, driven by growth in lending to households (11.6%), while corporate loans dropped by 1.5% y-o-y. • We expect further growth in domestic lending in 2017, facilitated by the effects of past monetary policy easing, expected recovery in economic activity, competition among banks in the lending market and low interest rates in the international money market. 8 Sustainable Economic Prospects are also Confirmed by Serbia’s Improved Rating Fall in the risk premium since end-Q1 2016 Chart 15 EMBI risk premium (basis points, daily values) EMBI Global Poland Croatia 600 500 Relatively stable EUR/RSD exchange rate movements Chart 16 Exchange rate developments (31 December 2012 = 100) Romania Turkey Hungary Serbia 400 105 Serbia Romania Poland Hungary 100 300 200 95 100 0 90 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5* 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 *Until June 6, 2017 • Macroeconomic stabilization in Serbia combined with fall in global risk aversion resulted in a significant fall in Serbia’s risk premium (to the level below 160 bp). • In June 2016, Fitch upgraded the rating from ‘B+’ to ‘BB-’ with stable outlook and affirmed it in December, while S&P revised Serbia’s outlook to positive from stable (‘BB-’) in December. In March 2017, Moody’s upgraded Serbia’s rating from ‘B1’ to ‘Ba3’ with a stable outlook. 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5* 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 *Until June 6, 2017 • Despite global uncertainties, relative stability of the dinar against the euro has been preserved. • Exchange rate movements in 2017 were mostly determined by movements in global financial markets. Appreciation of the dinar since April is supported by favorable macroeconomic fundamentals and increased interest of foreign investors in dinar government securities. • After purchasing EUR 520 mln net in the IFEM in 2015, the NBS sold EUR 160 mln net in 2016. Since the beginning of 2017, the NBS has sold EUR 110 mln net. 9 Upward Trend of Dinarisation Overall macroeconomic stability leading to increased deposit dinarisation Chart 17 Share of dinar deposits of corporate and household sectors in total banking sector deposits (in %) 16 Dinarisation of household loans on a firm upward path Chart 18 Share of dinar in total bank receivables from the corporate and household sectors(in%) 60 50 40 55 45 35 50 40 30 45 35 25 40 30 20 35 25 15 30 20 10 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Household sector outstanding amounts lhs Corporate sector outstanding amounts rhs • The NBS supports the use of the dinar by delivering low and stable inflation, preserving relative stability of the dinar exchange rate and also by appropriate design of monetary policy instruments. The Government is contributing to the same goal through tax policy and by developing the dinar securities market – the dinar share of debt rose from 2.5% (2008) to 20.8% (April 2017). The dinar yield curve has been extended to ten years. • Private sector deposit dinarisation at end-April 2017 stood at 27.2% – up by 8 pp compared to end-2012 (when it stood at 19.3%) and also up by 3 pp compared to end-2014. 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Household sector outstanding amounts lhs Corporate sector outstanding amounts rhs • At end-Аpril 2017, 32.0% of loans to the private sector were in dinars. • Dinarisation of household loans is on the rise – from 35.1% at end-2012 to 48.3% at end-April 2017 as a result of a sharp drop in dinar interest rates, low inflation, relative stability of the exchange rate and NBS measures aimed to support dinarisation. • Results of the dinarisation process are confirmed by the first dinar security issuance by a top-rated IFI. In December 2016, the EBRD issued the dinar bond (3Y; RSD 2.5 bln; 3M BELIBOR+0.4pp), with high demand for the RSD security. 10 Conservative Framework Created a Robust Banking Sector High banking sector capitalisation as a result of strong prudential measures Chart 19 Capitalization of the Serbian banking sector (in %) Stress tests show that Serbian banking sector is resilient to potential adverse shocks Table 1 Core FSIs 26 Core FSI’s – April 2017 data 24 CAR* 22.3% Tier I to RWA* 20.6% 22 22.3 20 20.6 19.9 Liquidity indicator (reg. min 1.0) 2.1 18 Gross NPL 16 Gross NPL LLR coverage 120.4% 14 Gross NPL IFRS coverage 67.7% 12 Q1 2013 Q3 Q1 2014 CAR Q3 Q1 2015 Tier I to RWA Q3 Q1 2016 Q3 Q1 2017 Leverage 16.5% NOP 3.9% ROA 2.2% ROE 11.0% * Latest available data as of 30 April 2017 • As a result of conservative prudential measures in the previous period, Serbian banks have built up strong capital buffers, making them capable to cope with credit risk which is still relatively high. • High quality of the Serbian banking sector capital base is evidenced by the fact that Tier 1 capital accounts for the largest share (more than 90%) of regulatory capital. • The Quantitative Impact Study has shown that Serbian banks would have no difficulties complying with Basel 3 minimum capital requirements. • As a result of adopted measures, the share of NPLs declined by 5.7 pp since the adoption of the NPL Resolution Strategy, to 16.5% in April 2017. Narrowing was most evident with corporates – their share was reduced by almost 9 pp, to 17.1% in April 2017. • Their coverage by IFRS provisions and regulatory reserves is high and rising. • Solvency stress tests confirm that the CAR remains above the regulatory minimum even in the worst-case scenario. 11 During the Crisis Excess Risk Aversion Pushed Asset Structure Towards More Liquid Assets Serbian banking sector is highly liquid Favourable structure of banking sector assets Chart 20 Liquidity indicators of the Serbian banking sector (lhs in ratio points, rhs in %) Chart 21 Structure of banking sector assets (RSD bn) 3.00 100 2.75 90 2.50 2.1 2.25 80 70 2.00 1.7 1.75 35.5% 1.25 3.8% 3.000 2.500 60 50 1.50 3.500 40 60.6% 2.000 1.500 1.00 30 0.75 20 1.000 0.50 10 500 21.1% 14.5% 0 0.25 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Liqudity indicator (reg. min 1.0, lhs) Narrow liquidity indicator (reg. min 0.7, lhs) Liquid assets to total assets (%, rhs) 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 Cash and assets with central bank 2014 2015 Securities 2016 2017 (Apr) Loans Other • Liquidity indicators are constantly at levels significantly higher than regulatory limits. • Liquid assets accounted for ca. 36% of total balance sheet assets in April 2017. • Seasonal effects of the “savings week” no longer have a high impact on liquidity indicators due to a decrease in interest rates on term deposits. • In seven years, the share of securities (dominantly government securities) has increased by ca. 15 pp, and in April 2017 it accounted for about 21% of the banking sector’s total net balance sheet assets. 12 Structural slides 13 Recent Pick-up in Headline Inflation Driven Mainly by Energy and Unprocessed Food Prices Chart 22 Contributions of CPI components to y-o-y inflation (y-o-y rates, pp) 16 12 8 3.5 4 0 -4 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 7 9 11 1 3 5 2010. 2011. 2012. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. 2017. Energy Industrial products excl. food and energy Unprosessed food Tolerance Band Services Processed food CPI Inflation Inflation Target • Historically, short-term volatility of headline inflation was mainly driven by food prices. 14 GDP Growth More Sustainable than Pre-Crisis Pre-crisis GDP growth was driven by consumption; the trend reversed after the crisis in favour of investments and net exports Chart 23 Contributions to real GDP growth (y-o-y rates, pp) 20 5.9 12 5.5 4.9 Chart 24 GDP composition (share in GDP) NX I CII 16 GDP composition has shifted towards less consumption and more net exports and investments G C GDP 5.4 100% C I G 77.7% 76.9% 80% CII NX 74.6% 75.0% 74.7% 73.3% 72.2% 71.2% 60% 8 2.6 4 0.6 2.8 3.0 3.5 1.4 0.8 0 40% 20% -4 -1.0 -1.8 0% -8 -12.4% -20% -12 -16.9%-17.5% -3.1 -16 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017*2018* * NBS forecast • Prior to the crisis, high capital inflows led to consumptionbased growth which resulted in increased external imbalances. With the first wave of the crisis, this trend reversed. Growth was slower, but more sustainable and driven by net exports and investments. • Large-scale investments in the automobile and oil industries (2011–2012) have helped the economy to rebalance. • The new investment cycle that began in 2015 is more diversified, and is leading to further rebalancing of the economy and sustainable growth. -13.3% -11.2%-10.5% -12.2% -14.0% -40% 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017*2018* * NBS forecast • As a consequence of the crisis, the share of private consumption in GDP is declining, bringing painful but necessary adjustments. • The EU accession process and euro area recovery, as well as improvement of the investment and business climate, led to an increase in tradable sector FDIs, contributing to a more favourable GDP composition. • Successful fiscal consolidation and structural reforms created a foundation for healthy growth and freed up growth potential. 15 Positive Developments on the Labour Market Unemployment rate on a stable downward path Chart 25 Labour market indicators according to the Labour Force Survey (%) 50.0 41.2 42.6 45.5 44.2 Sustained manufacturing productivity increase coupled with growth in real wages Chart 26 Unit labour costs in manufacturing (cumulative indices, Q4 2014=100) 115 40.0 110 30.0 105 19.0 20.0 19.0 14.6 13.0 100 10.0 95 0.0 IV IV IV IV IV Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 Q3 Q1 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014* 2015 2016 2017 Source: Statistical Office Republic of Serbia. * Since 2014, LFS data published according to the new methodology. Unemployment rate Employment rate • According to the Labour Force Survey for Q1 2017, unemployment rate stood at 14.6%, which is 4.4 pp lower compared to Q1 2016. • At the same time, employment rate stood at 44.2%, improved by 1.6 pp. Higher employment rate is primarily a result of higher employment in industry and services. • Most favorable trends on the labour market are recorded on the formal segment, with employment in the private sector soaring by 6.9% in the last two and a half years, by and large as a result of higher employment in manufacturing. 90 I 2015 II III Source: SORS, CROSO, NBS calc. IV I II III IV I 2016 2017 Real gross wages Unit labour cost in manufacturing Productivity in manufacturing • Relative to Q4 2014, productivity in manufacturing increased by 5.1% in Q1 2017, driven by faster output (14.3%) than employment (8.7%) growth. • Productivity growth is most significant in sectors which saw high FDI inflows (automobiles, electronics, metals), suggesting positive effects of technology transfers. • Real gross wages went up as well – by 10.3%, which led to a slight increase in unit labour costs. 16 Improved External Position Owing to the Recovery of External Demand and Improved Supply of Exports Chart 27 Imports by country in I-IV 2017 (EUR mln) 900 800 Chart 28 Exports by country in I-IV 2017 (EUR mln) 12.5% of total imports 900 15.3% of total 800 exports 700 700 10.0% 600 8.9% 500 12.9% 600 8.0% 500 7.6% 400 400 4.6% 300 4.2% 5.6 300 3.5% 200 3.0% 3.0% 5.0% 4.3% 3.9% 3.6% 3.6% 3.5% ROM BUG MKD HUN CRO 200 100 100 0 0 GER ITA RUS CHN HUN PL TUR AT ITA FRA Chart 29 External Demand Indicator (long-term average = 100) GER BH RUS MNE Chart 30 Real Effective Exchange Rate (2005=100) 140 120 135 110 130 100 125 120 90 115 80 110 70 105 100 60 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 7101 4 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 7 10 1 4 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 17 Source: European Commission,NBS *Growth indicates appreciation. NPL Resolution Required a Systemic Approach – and, as Such, Gave Results • NPL development after the adoption of the NPL Resolution Strategy, especially in 2016, confirmed the correctness of implementation of interinstitutional and coordinated approach envisaged by the Strategy. NPL data, April 2017 Gross loans (EUR bn) Gross NPL (EUR bn) NPL ratio (%) Corporates 7.2 1.2 17.1 Households 7.0 0.7 9.4 6.3 0.5 8.7 Corporates in bankruptcy proceedings 0.7 0.6 99.9 Other 1.7 0.2 11.6 Total 16.5 2.7 16.5 of which: natural persons • The share of NPLs is still relatively high, but has a significant drop (0,5 p.p. since the beginning of the year and 5,7 p.p. since the adoption of the Strategy) • Despite a substantial fall, companies still account for the largest share in NPLs, especially those engaged in manufacturing, trade and construction activities, as well as entities in the bankruptcy procedure. • CHF-linked NPLs (66.5% of which are housing loans) accounted for 8.4% of total NPLs at the end of April 2017. • The continuation of NPL resolution efforts by banks, as well as the regulatory measures aimed at the recovery of credit activity are expected to further stimulate the decrease in the share of NPLs. 18 Efforts on NPL Resolution and Regulatory Efforts On 13 August 2015, the Government adopted the national NPL Resolution Strategy. In addition to this, both the Government and the National Bank of Serbia adopted action plans in order to fulfil strategic objectives. In the previous period, the NBS conducted all activities envisaged by its Action Plan aimed primarily at the enhancement of banks’ capacities to resolve NPLs. In line with this plan, the NBS: Published the Guidelines for implementation of IAS 39, Enhanced the reporting of NPLs by banks, Conducted an analysis regarding NPL market obstacles and limitations, Established a database on real estate collateral valuations and loans approved based on reported collateral, Introduced additional requests for banks regarding monitoring of collateral and engagement of persons which evaluate that collateral, Strengthened the regulatory treatment of restructured receivables in order to encourage sustainable restructuring practices and prevent the unsustainable restructuring practices (evergreening), The distressed asset management in banks has been improved by introducing additional requirements for banks in the context of strategic planning, Published the Guidelines for Disclosure of Bank Data and Information Related to the Quality of Assets for Banks. Other activities envisaged by the Strategy are under the competence of ministries (finance, economy, justice and construction), as well as the Deposit Insurance Agency. In addition, bylaws implementing Basel III standards in the Republic of Serbia have been adopted, cooperation with supervisors of the home countries of banks present in Serbia is continuously developing and strengthening and regular communication with the ECB and EBA is maintained. 19 Serbia’s Economic Outlook 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 NBS Forecast 2017 5.4 -3.1 0.6 1.4 -1.0 2.6 -1.8 0.8 2.8 3.0 3.5 6.1 -0.2 -0.5 0.9 -2.0 -0.6 -1.3 0.5 0.8 1.4 2.2 Private investment, in % 14.6 -23.7 -7.9 7.3 14.3 -7.7 -5.8 4.3 2.0 5.7 4.9 Government, in % -0.4 -4.4 0.1 -0.5 2.8 -6.4 0.9 0.3 4.9 2.2 3.7 Exports, in % 9.4 -6.9 15.0 5.0 0.8 21.3 5.7 10.2 11.9 10.0 9.0 Imports, in % Serbia Real GDP, y-o-y % Private consumption, in % 1 NBS Forecast 2018 12.0 -19.6 4.4 7.9 1.4 5.0 5.6 9.3 6.8 7.2 7.0 Unemployment Rate, in %4 13.6 16.1 19.2 23.0 23.9 22.1 19.2 17.7 15.3 n/a n/a Real Wages, in % 5.6 0.8 1.0 0.2 1.1 -1.5 -1.5 -2.1 2.5 n/a n/a Money Supply (M3), in % 9.8 21.5 12.9 10.3 9.4 4.6 7.6 6.6 11.5 n/a n/a CPI, 2 in % 8.6 6.6 10.3 7.0 12.2 2.2 1.7 1.5 1.6 Chart 2 Chart 2 National Bank of Serbia Key Policy Rate, 3 in % 17.8 9.5 11.5 9.75 11.25 9.5 8.0 4.5 4.0 n/a n/a Current Account Deficit BPM-6 (% of GDP) 21.2 6.6 6.8 10.9 11.6 6.1 6.0 4.7 4.0 4.0 3.6 ¹ Excluding the effect of change in inventories ² Inflation figures in the table represent Dec on Dec inflation: (Pt/Pt-12)*100-100 ³ End of period data 4 Labour Force Survey. Since 2014, data are revised according to the new LFS methodology. Data for 2017 is average of four quarters. 20 Banking Sector Overview 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 April 2017 34 33 33 32 * 30* 29* 30* 31* 31 Employees 31,182 29,887 29,228 28,394 26,380 25,106 24,257 23,847 23,788 Branches 2,635 2,487 2,383 2,243 1,989 1,787 1,730 1,719 1,704 636 629 664 678 741 794 796 813 802 74.3 73.5 74.1 75.2 74.3 74.5 76.1 76.7 74.6 22,530 24,015 25,211 25,322 24,827 24,545 25,059 26,253 26,029 Serbia Number of banks HHI Assets Share of foreign banks, Assets (net), Capital, % EUR m 4,667 4,720 5,104 5,198 5,186 5,074 5,090 5,122 5,196 13,404 15,324 17,204 17,273 16,140 16,170 16,175 16,442 16,535 2,103 2,592 3,275 3,217 3,448 3,483 3,491 2,800 2,735 15.7 16.9 19.0 18.6 21.4 21.5 21.6 17.0 16.5 13,570 14,263 14,584 14,936 15,067 15,637 16,523 18,242 17,964 209 21.4 241 19.9 296** 19.1 230*** 19.9 -18 20.9 29 20.0 80 20.9 172 21.8 189 22.3 Liquidity Ratio 1.9 1.0 2.2 2.1 2.4 2.2 2.1 2.1 2.1 FX ratio, 3.6 3.9 6.2 5.5 4.4 3.9 4.4 2.7 3.9 % 1.0 1.1 1.2** 1.0*** -0.1 0.1 0.3 0.7 2.2 ROE, % 4.6 5.4 6.0** 4.7*** -0.4 0.6 1.6 3.4 11.0 NIM1, % 5.1 4.6 4.6 4.3 4.2 4.3 4.3 3.9 3.8 EUR m Loans (gross), EUR m Of which gross NPL, EUR m Gross NPL ratio, % Deposits, EUR m Pretax Income, CAR, % ROA, EUR m % 1 NIM to average total asset * The NBS revoked operating licence from Nova Agrobanka on 27 October 2012, from Razvojna banka Vojvodine on 6 April 2013, from Privredna banka Beograd on 26 October 2013 and from Univerzal banka Beograd on 31 January 2014. The NBS issued operating licence to Mirabank on 16 December 2014 and the bank started its operations in April 2015. The NBS issued operating licence to Bank of China Srbija on 20 December 2016 but the data on the bank's operations are not included in this table. ** with Agrobanka: Pretax Income € 12.0m, ROA 0.05, ROE 0.24 *** with Razvojna banka Vojvodina: Pretax Income €102.5m, ROA 0.43, ROE 2.05 21