Audio By Carbonatix
Fitch Ratings has affirmed the Long-Term Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) of Standard Bank Group Limited (SBG) and its main operating subsidiary, The Standard Bank of South Africa Limited (SBSA), at 'BB-'.
The UK-based firm also assigned a Stable outlook.
Fitch said SBG and SBSA's IDRs were driven by their standalone creditworthiness, as expressed by their Viability Ratings (VRs) of 'bb-'. The VRs reflect SBG's leading domestic and regional franchise, strong profitability and comfortable capital buffers and liquidity.
However, it said the assigned VRs are one notch below the implied VR of 'bb' due to the following constraint:
Operating Environment/Sovereign Rating
Fitch said this underlines the concentration of activities in South Africa and high sovereign-related exposure relative to capital (222% of SBSA's equity at end of half-year 2023). The Stable Outlooks on the Long-Term IDRs mirror those on South Africa.
The National Ratings reflect the entities' creditworthiness in local currency relative to that of other South African issuers. They are in line with all other rated banks in the country.
Leading Domestic Franchise
SBG has a leading domestic franchise through its main operating entity, SBSA, which accounted for 24% of South African banking system assets at end of half-year 2023.
SBG has a leading sub-Saharan Africa franchise, with operations spanning 19 other sub-Saharan African countries. Revenue diversification is strong by income stream and geography.
Significant Household Lending:
SBG retail lending represented 40% of gross loans at end half-year 2023.
It is concentrated within South Africa and largely comprises floating-rate residential mortgages extended at high loan/value ratios (90% in 1H23).
Increased Impaired Loans
SBG's Fitch-adjusted impaired loans (Stage 3 loans under IFRS 9) ratio increased to 6.5% at half-year from 5.5% at end-2021 as the effects of high interest rates, higher inflation and severe load shedding fed into the lending book.
“We expect the impaired loans ratio to stabilise by end-2023”.
Strong Profitability
It said strong profitability is supported by a wide net interest margin, large non-interest income and moderate loan-impairment charges.
Operating returns on risk-weighted assets rose to 3.5% in 2022 from 2.8% in 2021, underpinned by wide net interest margins.
Strong Funding Franchise
Fitch-adjusted customer deposits represent the main source of funding (74% at end-1H23).
“Depositor concentration is fairly high but behavioural stability benefits from a leading domestic franchise. We consider liquidity coverage healthy”, Fitch noted.
Latest Stories
-
England are tough, but we can play against Ghana, Panama – Croatia coach reacts to World Cup draw
3 hours -
We can beat anyone – Otto Addo reacts to World Cup draw
3 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Mensah brace fires All Blacks to victory over Eleven Wonders
5 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: Petitions against the OSP, EC heads, and 2025 WASSCE results
5 hours -
Ambassador urges U.S. investors to prioritise land verification as Ghana courts more investment
6 hours -
Europe faces an expanding corruption crisis
6 hours -
Ghana’s Dr Bernard Appiah appointed to WHO Technical Advisory Group on alcohol and drug epidemiology
6 hours -
2026 World Cup: Ghana drawn against England, Croatia and Panama in Group L
6 hours -
3 dead, 6 injured in Kpando–Aziave road crash
6 hours -
Lightwave eHealth accuses Health Ministry of ‘fault-finding’ and engaging competitor to audit its work
6 hours -
Ayewa Festival ignites Farmers Day with culture, flavour, and a promise of bigger things ahead
7 hours -
Government to deploy 60,000 surveillance cameras nationwide to tackle cybercrime
7 hours -
Ghana DJ Awards begins 365-day countdown to 2026 event
7 hours -
Making Private University Charters Optional in Ghana: Implications and Opportunities
7 hours -
Mampong tragedy: Students among 30 injured as curve crash kills three
7 hours
