Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Singapore landlords discover perpetual debt is the new equity

Singapore landlords discover perpetual debt is the new equity

[SINGAPORE] Singapore landlords are loading up on bonds masked as equity to get around new rules curbing their debt amid a property slump.
Real-estate investment trusts issued a record S$700 million of perpetual notes with no set maturity date in 2015 and they're likely to sell more, according to Fitch Ratings. The Monetary Authority of Singapore is capping borrowings of REITs at 45 per cent of assets from next year and debt that can be considered equity offers landlords a way of complying with the stricter rules.
Falling values, rents and occupancies for debt-backed properties could tip Singapore's economy further into trouble amid the slowest growth in three years. Office rents may fall as much as 7 per cent this year and another 8 per cent in 2016 as demand slows, according to DTZ, while house prices keep declining. Global non-financial companies seeking to cut their leverage have issued more than US$50 billion of perpetuals this year.
"With the lower leverage threshold, there might be more Singapore REITs who will look to tap this source of funding given it is still treated as equity instead of debt," said Singapore-based Tim Gibson, co-head of global property equities at Henderson Global Investors Ltd. His firm manages about US$123 billion worldwide. "Investors continue to seek yield in this environment." On Oct 26, office landlord Keppel REIT sold S$150 million of perpetual debt without a so-called step-up coupon, a gradually rising interest rate that's usually a feature of such bonds. It sold the notes at 4.98 per cent, 183 basis points more than seven-year debt it sold in February. In the same month, business park owner Ascendas REIT raised S$300 million issuing similar notes, while apartments specialist Ascott Residence Trust issued S$250 million of them in June.
Under global accounting rules, bonds with no fixed maturity that allow the deferral of coupon payments may be treated as equity. Singapore regulators will insist REITs' notes meet those requirements, as well as having no step-up in interest rates and being subordinate to other creditors. While such features reduce the allure for investors, they benefit property owners when falling asset values cause their leverage to rise.
The value of Singapore's office buildings fell 0.1 per cent in the quarter ending Sept 30 from the previous three months while shops declined 0.3 per cent, according to the Urban Redevelopment Authority. House prices dropped 1.3 per cent, the most since the second quarter of 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The FTSE Straits Times Real Estate Investment Trust Index has dropped 11.4 per cent this year, on course for its worst annual performance since 2011.
"Most Singapore listed REITS have good credit quality," said Neel Gopalakrishnan, an emerging markets fixed income analyst at Credit Suisse Group AG's private banking and wealth management unit in Singapore. "Hence, there is likely to be good demand" for their perpetuals.
Singapore's more than 30 listed REITs had an average debt to asset ratio of 34.6 per cent at the end of September, versus 32.8 per cent from a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. OUE Hospitality Trust had the highest leverage at about 41.9 per cent, up from 32.4 per cent over that time. It didn't respond to e-mail and phone calls seeking comment.
Frasers Hospitality Trust, whose leverage stood at 38.9 per cent versus 39.1 per cent on March 31, maintains a prudent approach to capital management strategy and would employ an appropriate mix of debt and equity to maximize returns to shareholders, it said by e-mail on Monday.
The new cap on REITs' borrowings takes effect from Jan 1, and leaves smaller room for some to take on new debt to fund acquisitions or repair their balance sheets, according to Fitch. The threshold replaces existing limits of 60 per cent for rated trusts and 35 per cent for those without a credit score, the Monetary Authority of Singapore decided in July.
Singapore's listed REITs could issue as much as S$12.5 billion of traditional debt without breaching the new threshold, Hasira De Silva, a Singapore-based analyst at Fitch said in an interview. That leeway narrows to S$7.5 billion if their S$110 billion of assets suffer a 10 per cent depreciation, he said. That's based on their 34 per cent leverage at the end of September.
"The perpetual will be used by Singapore REITs in 2016 to fix balance sheets as required, because we expect more pressure on asset values then," De Silva said.
Buyers of the notes will tend to be individuals rather than funds, according to Deutsche Bank AG. That could translate into higher volatility.
"Most of the demand for Singapore dollar perpetuals has been from retail investors," said Vishal Goenka, head of local currency credit in Singapore at Deutsche Bank. "As issuance of perpetuals picks up in future, caution is advised in a higher interest-rate environment."
BLOOMBERG

Wall Street urged to improve its cybersecurity defences

Wall Street urged to improve its cybersecurity defences

[WASHINGTON] President Barack Obama's administration is urging Wall Street banks to bolster their defences against cyber-attacks, calling the US finance industry a "treasure trove" for high-tech criminals.
"Virtually every process you engage in needs to be reviewed and updated, enterprise-wide, from a cyber-resiliency perspective," Deputy Treasury Secretary Sarah Bloom Raskin said in remarks prepared for a banking conference on Tuesday. Companies should require multi-step identity checks for anyone accessing their networks or data, she said.
Raskin's speech at the annual meeting of the Clearing House, a financial-industry trade group, comes a week after US prosecutors detailed a vast, multi-year criminal enterprise focusing on hacks of at least nine big financial and publishing companies. Suspects were tied to previously reported hacks of JPMorgan Chase & Co, E*Trade Financial Corp, Scottrade Financial Services Inc and News Corp's Dow Jones & Co.
Only people "absolutely necessary to run your business, operations, and systems" should have high-level access, Raskin said. "Banks - as the entry points and connecting nodes for the financial system as well as the holders of a treasure trove of high value customer data - are natural targets for bad actors."
Payment-system firms are also attractive targets because they are "therails on which currency, debit and credit card, and other transfers of monetary value travel," she said.
BLOOMBERG

ECB asking top banks to hold 10.1% CET 1 capital on average

ECB asking top banks to hold 10.1% CET 1 capital on average

[FRANKFURT] Euro zone banks on the European Central Bank's direct watch will be required to hold a Common Equity Tier 1 capital equal to 10.1 per cent of their risk-weighted assets on average next year, an ECB executive board member said on Tuesday.
Individual big banks may, however, have vastly different standards depending on their balance sheets, with requirements ranging from 8 per cent to about 14 per cent, Sabine Lautenschlaeger told a business conference.
The ECB is asking the 122 banks it supervises to increase their average pillar 2 capital by around 30 basis points as part of its Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process. This rises to 50 basis points for globally significant institutions, which have to hold a further buffers.
It earlier said that all but just a few banks already meet the new requirements and the rest are working on plans to raise capital.
REUTERS

'Shadow banking' hit US$80t in 2014: regulator

'Shadow banking' hit US$80t in 2014: regulator

[ZURICH] The value of non-bank "shadow banking" rose to some US$80 trillion last year, according to a report last Thursday by the Financial Stability Board (FSB), which advises G20 states on banking reform and oversees regulation of the global financial system.
The report, issued ahead of the G20s summit in Antalya, said shadow banking activities grew by US$2 trillion across 2014 on a broad measure, representing some 80 per cent of global GDP and 90 per cent of global financial system assets.
The FSB, an international body that monitors and makes recommendations about the global financial system to the G20, was set up six years ago after the implosion of Lehman Brothers and publishes annual reports into the parallel banking system under its remit to promote internationally transparent financial stability.
Shadow banking involves credit intermediation outside traditional banking, including hedge and investment funds.
The Switzerland-based body, chaired by Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, is also tasked with identifying potential weak points in the global financial system.
The FSB said it has devised a monitoring framework to track shadow banking developments to enable the identification of systemic risks, "initiating corrective actions where necessary." The organisation said this year it has added a more narrowly-focused "economic function" overview of shadow banking for its annual monitoring of the non-bank financial sector in order to devise policy responses aimed at risk mitigation.
The FSB, which works in conjunction with national and international financial regulators, estimated that under the new, activity-based, narrow measure of shadow banking, the sector was worth US$36 trillion in 2014, from US$35 trillion in 2013 - equivalent to some 30 per cent of overall non-bank financial sector assets and 60 per cent of the GDP of the 26 participating jurisdictions.
By comparison, the traditional banking sector was last year worth US$135 trillion, 6.4 per cent up on 2013, adjusted for exchange rate effects.
For Carney, "non-bank financing is a welcome additional source of credit to the real economy. The FSB's efforts to transform shadow banking into resilient market-based finance, through enhanced vigilance and mitigating financial stability risks, will help facilitate sustainable economic growth".
But at the same time he stressed the FSB needed to be vigilant in looking to transform shadow banking into a robust source of market finance and at a level of risk which would not destabilise the financial system.
Glenn Stevens, chairman of the FSB Standing Committee on Assessment of Vulnerabilities said: "The annual shadow banking monitoring exercise is an important mechanism for identifying potential financial system vulnerabilities in the non-bank sector. "The activities-based approach in this year's report enhances our understanding of the evolving composition of this sector and potential risks."
AFP

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