FINANCE
The next wave of change
With the financial master plan ushering in a long-awaited consolidation,
optimism is rising that local institutions will finally achieve
the size and scale needed to be competitive and immunised from
external shocks
By DARANA CHUDASRI
The economic crisis in 1997 saw the closure of dozens of finance
companies and a handful of banks suffering from a wave of loan
defaults and deposit runs.
Seven years later, the Thai financial sector appears poised to
undergo a new wave of change, one precipitated no so much due to
immediate financial troubles, but rather regulatory pressure aimed
at streamlining and strengthening the sector for the future.
Bank of Thailand officials plainly speak of their expectations
that by 2005, the financial sector should shrink in half, in part
due to mergers among institutions seeking to upgrade their position,
in other parts due to voluntary downsizing.
The financial sector master plan, approved in January, aims to
streamline the sector, overhaul the regulatory and supervisory
framework and expand financial services to rural communities. The
timing of the regulatory changes comes at a time when Thai banks
have been reporting record profit levels, thanks to low interest
rates, the strong economy and pickup in private investment and
consumer spending.
One of the greatest changes under the plan is the elimination
of finance companies and credit fonciers. Finance companies, long
an underclass to commercial banks, can now upgrade to either full-service
or retail bank licences or face being stripped of their ability
to raise public deposits and relegated to the role of credit companies.
Companies seeking to upgrade to full-service licences must maintain
capital of more than five billion baht and merge with at least
one other institution. Retail banks face a much smaller capital
requirement at 250 million baht, but face restrictions in their
potential client pool and services and products permitted.
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| Banks have adopted various innovative approaches to draw
and retain customers. |
Foreign banks face a similar choice. The plan requires them to
consolidate operations under a "single presence" concept,
with international banking facilities to be eliminated. Foreign
banks can upgrade to a subsidiary status, allowing the opening
of new branches upcountry.
For commercial banks, the new plan poses fewer challenges. Thai
banks, since the crisis, have already undergone waves of restructuring
to cope with increasing competition and changes in the marketplace.
The small-tier banks have come under the greatest difficulty,
with two hybrid banks, Bank of Asia and DBS Thai Danu, both announcing
changes in the first half of the year in the face of growing market
pressure. ABN Amro announced it was selling off its majority control
in Bank of Asia to Singapore's UOB as part of a plan to focus resources
on China. UOB is widely expected to merge Bank of Asia with UOB
Radanasin.
DBS Thai Danu, meanwhile, has merged with Thai Military Bank and
the Industrial Finance Corporation of Thailand, a deal expected
to be completed by November.
The shareholder manoeuvres among banks represent just another
step in the changes that have continually faced the sector over
the past several years.
Perhaps one of the most significant developments to occur over
the course of the Thaksin Shinawatra government has been the role
of state-owned banks in the economy. Since 2001, state banks such
as Krung Thai Bank, BankThai and Siam City Bank have largely focused
on aggressive loan growth. Thanks to state policies stripping out
their dud loans to the Thai Asset Management Corp, state banks
looked to rapidly build up their asset portfolios to justify their
large capital bases and assist government policies aimed at boosting
economic growth.
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| Low-interest loans drew keen interest among prospective homebuyers
at the recent Money Expo. |
Freed from their bad loans and faced with less provisioning needs
than private banks, state-owned banks quickly cut their lending
costs to draw customers from other institutions and pump funds
into the economy.
From 2001 to 2003, private banks, wary of entering into a price-cutting
game or easing risk management standards that were implemented
to avoid the mistakes of the past, have mostly concentrated on
internal reforms aimed at boosting their internal efficiency.
With the corporate market still weak and the best companies able
to turn to the bond and equity markets, attention turned to the
consumer retail market. A number of banks, notably Kasikornbank,
Bank of Ayudhya and Siam Commercial Bank, launched change management
programmes aimed at increasing their retail presence, with millions
of baht in new investments made on rebranding exercises, branch
redesigns and new technology and partnerships to help lock in customer
loyalty.
Operations for most Thai banks have since been centralised, with
credit functions managed through regional hubs and products clearly
segmented between retail customers, small businesses and large
companies.
Branches now mostly serve as marketing points of contact for customers,
with recent redesigns aimed at emphasising the "user experience".
With these changes now mostly complete and the economy firmly
on a growth path, private banks have taken a more aggressive stance
and are actively increasing their marketing activities to build
up customer share.
Looking to the future, authorities say that the financial master
plan will remain the main development framework for at least the
next three years, with no new entries permitted into the sector.
Further changes are expected to come over the next several years
with the passage of a new financial institutions act and a limited
deposit insurance programme replacing the current blanket guarantee
offered on deposits. Financial institutions will also face the
need to change their risk management processes once the new Basel
II framework comes into effect, replacing the current guidelines
used by banks around the world to match capital relative to their
loan assets.
While the central bank has announced that Thai banks will be required
to comply with the new framework, implementation will likely be
phased in over the latter part of the decade.
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