SME Securitisation in Eastern Europe: an underexploited market? Dr. Martina Spaeth, Head of Securitisation, Munich, Germany

SME Securitisation in Eastern Europe: an underexploited market? Dr. Martina Spaeth, Head of Securitisation, Munich, Germany SME's in Europe – an Im...
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SME Securitisation in Eastern Europe: an underexploited market?

Dr. Martina Spaeth, Head of Securitisation, Munich, Germany

SME's in Europe – an Important Economic Driver

„ SME's are an important business sector – prosperous SME business is an indicator of economic stability! E.g. in Germany, 99.7% of all companies are classified as SME's and account for 39% of turnover and 71% of employment! „ SME's are Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, often family-owned businesses. The European Commission defines SME's according to size and business volume:

Enterprise category

Number of employees

Turnover

OR

Balance sheet total

Medium-sized

< 250

≤ € 50 million

≤ € 43 million

Small

< 50

≤ € 10 million

≤ € 10 million

Micro

< 10

≤ € 2 million

≤ € 2 million

„ In different countries, SME's may be defined wider, reflecting the economy. SME CLO's have included respective loans in transactions in many western European countries. „ In Eastern Europe, SME companies contribute significantly to fast growing economies

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Key Indicators of SME Relevance in the CEE Corporate Sector

„ CEE is a large and highly dynamic region with outstanding prospects for growth and prosperity. „ Despite a certain growth of the banking sector, the region remains underbanked. The highest degree of financial intermediation remains in the SEE region. „ Medium enterprises generate around 20% of value added in the CEE corporate market

N° of Employees (thousands)

N° of Employees (% of tot corp)

Value added (% of tot corp)

Bulgaria

240

1,318

5

99.7

72.6

53.2

Czech Republic

878

2,461

30

99.8

68.9

56.7

Estonia

38

305

4

99.6

78.1

75.1

Latvia

62

469

5

99.7

75.6

71.1

Lithunia

93

619

5

99.7

72.9

58.5

Hungary

556

1,783

20

99.8

70.9

50.2

1,405

5,289

59

99.8

69.8

48.4

Romania

410

2,463

13

99.5

60.8

48.4

Slovenia

88

371

8

99.7

66.4

60.6

Slovakia

42

501

7

98.8

54

44.5

Poland

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Economic value added (in EUR bn)

N° of Enterprises (thousands)

N° of Enterprises (% of tot corp)

Source: Eurostat

CEE Corporate Credit - Developments

„ CEE is a large and highly dynamic region with outstanding prospects for growth and prosperity. „ Credit to private companies remains a more solid business in Eurozone countries than in CEE: while at year-end 2006 credit to non-banks in CE country amounted to 40.4% of GDP, for the Eurozone countries the ratio was 119.2%. „ However, the y-o-y growth is remarkable and increasing every year: CE experienced a 28% y-o-y growth in 2006 (while Eurozone countries y-o-y growth was 13%). „ While the overall CEE volumes are significant there is (a) not enough loan portfolio/diversification for a liquid securitisation programme to take off. (b) higher correlation of industries (c) in some countries have rating ceilings or the political situation is considered less stable than in Western Europe

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Non-banks Credit y-o-y Growth (in EUR)

Total Credit to Non-banks (as % of GDP )

40

40

1999 2006

35

35

30

(%)

(%)

30 25

20 15

20

CE SEE CIS

15

10 5 0

10 2004

4

25

2005

2006

CE

SEE

CIS

Source: Local central banks, RZB

SME Securitization in Europe: A diverse picture! Eastern European issuance volumes are low but rising steadily! „ European SME CLO Issuance Share by Country 1999-2007

Belgium 2% Portugal 4%

other* 2.0%

Switzerland 4% Netherlands 13%

Germany 40%

Source: Fitch *other includes Austria, Finland, Italy and Bulgaria Spain 35%

„ The Spanish government and the Region of Catalonia together guaranteed almost EUR 10 bn of Spanish SME CLOs. KfW, ICO, EIF have facilitated the development of SME programs, e.g. Promise and FTPYME deals in Germany/ Spain. „ Established European SME CLO issuance is dominated by German and Spanish transactions! „ Transactions can be split into synthetic and cash deals. „ Under Basel II synthetic deals have become more interesting to Banks as originators, especially given higher spread levels on the rated notes. „ The deal history so far includes transactions like Roof CEE, Pro Credit BV or Blue Orchard. These deals prove investor appetite. „ In Emerging Markets, SME CLOs have been mainly placed privately due to size or investors preferences and appetite.

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CEE SME Securitisation of banks offers opportunities!

Benefits for the originator: „ „ „ „

Transfer of economic capital Funding Profit realization RoE increase Regulatory capital relief

Benefits for the borrowers:

Benefits for the investor:

„ indirect benefit through better pricings „ Public lending support „ Extension of existing credit lines

„ Portfolio diversification „ Participation in specific credit markets „ Choice of level of risk to be taken „ Higher returns on less known markets

„ Eastern European Securitisation allows to combine assets from different Eastern European economic areas - portfolios can be multinational or homogeneous. „ New European Union countries offer opportunities! „ Liquidity has so far not been an issue because funding was mainly provided by international parent companies. However, the current liquidity meltdown and continuous growth will generate the need for funding. „ Structures for capital relief are developing - securitisation could take advantage from development of appropriate information system and increasing transparency „ Securitisation can support banks to better re-equilibrate asset-liability management. „ Innovative securitisation techniques can provide an interesting yield/return combination and attract potential investors . 6

SME financings face challenges!

„ Investors/ Originators suffer from significant repricing!

Outstanding SME Defaults as % of Outstanding Portfolio Balance 2.5 2.0 1.5 %

„ Lending criteria are tightening across Europe! „ Financing possibilities for SMEs - especially for startups and risky entities are restricted. „ Lending costs will increase!

1.0 0.5

„ The delinquency cycle in Europe is not yet on an upward path as is the case in the US. However, the situation can easily turn and delinquencies are expected to rise.

0.0 Dec 99 Aug 00 Apr 01 Dec 01 Aug 02 Apr 03 Dec 03 Aug 04 Apr 05 Dec 05 Aug 06 Apr 07

Austria Netherlands

Belgium Portugal

Bulgaria Spain

Finland Switzerland

Germany

Source: Fitch

„ Default rates in Europe are expected to rise, however, a severe deterioration is unlikely.

„ Higher delinquencies will also affect Eastern European SME performance!

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SME securitization in CEE: challenges and opportunities

„ Synthetic securitization is a solution for banks who can still obtain cheap funding but face a significant RWA increase through growth in CEE. „ The overall business model of balance sheet ABS for RWA reduction is still healthy. „ Given generally small countries and volumes, conduit financing and private placement will dominate the CEE securitization market. „ Balance sheet CEE transactions can attract investors appetite due to the spread pick up and novelty of the asset class

„ Funding can be obtained efficiently through SME CLO's via the capital markets or ABCP Conduit Financings. Challenges lie in issues surrounding the true sale of the loans and their related securities. „ European SME CLOs should be amongst those asset classes to return first, due to high diversity of the pools and the need of financing of SMEs „ Microfinance loans, the trend product, also qualifies for highly diversified SME CLOs or ABCP conduit funding.

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Unicredit Market Share in CEE (%) As of Dec. 2006 (incl. mergers and acquisitions through 2007)

23.5

C ro a tia

20.8

B o sn ia -H erze g ovin a

B u lga ria

10.8 10.2 10.1 9.8

S lo va kia T u rkey Cze ch R e pu b lic K a za khs ta n

S lo ven ia Uk rain e

5.6 4.6

H un g ary S erb ia

B altic Co u nt ries

TO P 5

6.8 6.4 6.2

R om an ia

R u ssia

N°1

18.8 18.6

P o la n d

1.8 1. 7

TO P 10

„ The UniCredit Group is the leader in Central and Eastern Europe, an area featuring rapid economic growth rates. „ The UniCredit Group has a significant competitive edge in terms of total assets (EUR 109 bn) , revenues (EUR 5.4 bn), and number of branches (3,654).

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Source: UniCredit CEE Research

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