Moody’s Investors Service raised its outlook on the UK banking system to stable, citing improving profitability and lower impairments after lenders stepped up efforts to clean up balance sheets and raise capital ratios.
Moody’s increased the outlook from negative and said that it maintains a negative outlook on the long-term debt and deposit ratings of large UK banks, “reflecting its view that the UK authorities will continue to take steps to reduce the level of systemic support over the medium term.”
British banks have sold assets and eliminated jobs to bolster earnings and meet tougher capital rules aimed to make them more resilient in future financial crises.
Barclays, Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland have all said that sales of businesses and retained profits mean they won't need to raise money from equity investors.
“We believe that UK banks are sufficiently well capitalised to absorb expected losses from both our central and adverse stress scenarios,” the ratings company said. “Moody’s expects profitability to recover from its very low levels, reflecting the improvement in asset quality and already high levels of provisions for conduct-related costs.”
Moody’s said the upgrade also reflects an “increasingly stable economic outlook.”
While UK lenders continue to face “the prospect of low medium-term economic growth,” the firm said it does not expect “a deterioration in the operating environment.”
Banks will be “well capitalised for the risks they face” once they meet the Prudential Regulation Authority’s buffer requirements, according to the report.
The PRA, the Bank of England’s new banking supervisor, last month outlined £13.4 billion that lenders must raise by the end of 2013 to withstand possible losses on loans, fines and other risks.
“In the long term, Moody’s expects UK systemic risk will be reduced by higher capital requirements, including significant loss-absorbing and counter-cyclical capital buffers,” it said. “The stable outlook for the system is compatible with the stable outlook on the standalone credit assessment of most UK banks.”
Bloomberg