2010/08/06
(Editor's
notes: These criteria have been superseded by the article titled
" TRC Financial Services Sector Issue Rating Criteria," published
on November 29, 2011)
Primary
Analyst:
|
Andy
Chang, CFA; (886) 2 8722-5815
andy_chang@taiwanratings.com.tw |
Secondary Analyst:
|
Daniel
Hsiao; (886) 2 8722-5826
daniel_hsiao@taiwanratings.com.tw
Susan Chu; (886) 2 8722-5813
susan_chu@taiwanratings.com.tw |
- Taiwan Ratings
Corp. (TRC) is refining its issue rating criteria to provide guideline
on the issue rating of financial services sectors (including banks,
securities firms, insurers, finance companies, and financial holding
companies.) This article illustrates how TRC will assign issue
ratings on its TRC scale. This article is related to Standard
& Poor's Ratings Services criteria articles, "Hybrid
Capital Handbook September 2008 edition," published on Sept.
15, 2008, and "Standard & Poor's Approach To Rating Bank
Securities," published on March 19, 2004.
SCOPE OF THE CRITERIA
- TRC is refining
its issue rating criteria to provide guideline on the issue rating
of bonds issued by financial services sectors. The criteria describes
how, for obligations issued by financial services sectors, issue
ratings may be equivalent to or notched down from the counterparty
credit ratings as a result of various analytical considerations.
- These criteria
are related to only long-term issue ratings on the TRC scale and
do not affect any Standard & Poor's (S&P) global scale
ratings assigned to Taiwanese issuers. The notching process will
be based from the issuer rating of TRC scale ratings, rather than
S&P global scale ratings. Moreover, these criteria do not
address short-term ratings or other non-TRC scale ratings.
IMPACT
ON OUTSTANDING RATINGS
- This criteria
refinement will not result in rating actions on current outstanding
debt and hybrid issues.
EFFECTIVE
DATE AND TRANSITION
- The refined
criteria are effective immediately.
METHODOLOGY
Rating The
Issue
- In the financial
services sectors (including banks, securities firms, insurers,
finance companies, and financial holding companies), Taiwan Ratings
Corp. (TRC) assigns two types of credit ratings-one to issuers
and the other to individual issues. The first type is called a
counterparty credit rating (CCR). It is our current opinion of
an issuer's ability and willingness to meet its financial commitments
on a timely basis. In contrast, while issue ratings address timeliness,
they also address the relative ranking in bankruptcy and deferral
risk on instruments where this is allowable.
- In Taiwan,
the issue ratings are assigned to conventional debt issues (including
senior unsecured debt and subordinated unsecured debt) and hybrid
capital instruments. Most types of hybrid capital instruments
afford equity benefit to issuers by having ongoing payment requirements
that are more flexible than interest payments associated with
conventional debt, and by being contractually subordinated to
such debt. Obviously, these characteristics make the instruments
riskier for investors than debt. In assigning issue ratings to
hybrid capital issues, we seek to assess the incremental risks
associated with the issue in terms of payment timeliness and principal
recovery compared to the CCR and to nondeferrable conventional
debt. We reflect these risks in the ratings of hybrid capital
issues by assigning them ratings that are "notched down"
from the CCR. Owing to the unpredictable nature of some of the
risks to which hybrid capital issue ratings are subject, the ratings
are potentially more volatile than the ratings on conventional
debt issues. In certain circumstances, where a bank is experiencing
deteriorating credit quality, we may decide to widen the gap between
the CCR and hybrid capital issue rating.
- We also utilize
this framework across the rating spectrum. In the case of highly
rated issuers, the prospect of financial distress is, by definition,
extremely distant. Still, issue ratings reflect our relative assessment
of how different instruments in the issuer's capital structure
might fare, should the downside case materialize. Some highly
rated issuers have argued that in their particular cases, the
risk of deferral is so remote that it should not be reflected
in a lower issue rating than for subordinated debt. If we accepted
this argument, we would not notch down for deferral risk, but
we would also see little basis for recognizing equity content
in the issue.
Rating
The Issue: Subordination
- Subordination
adversely affects the ultimate recovery prospects of subordinated
obligation holders in a bankruptcy, since claims of priority creditors
must be satisfied first. For issuers rated at 'twBBB-' or above,
we assign a rating one notch below the CCR for issues that are
subordinated (but not deferrable). In the case of issuers rated
at 'twBB+' or below, we automatically rated the issue two notches
below the CCR just to reflect subordination (apart from the incremental
notching for deferral risk). These differentials reflect the weaker
recovery prospects for subordinated debt in a bank failure. Moreover,
when subordinated debt has a greater likelihood of payment default
than does senior debt-either because of special features in banking
law that limit the circumstances under which subordinated debt
can be paid or because of covenants in the subordinated debt that
establish capital or earnings tests that must be met before payment
can be made-ratings differentials would usually be wider.
- We do not
distinguish in the notching between gradations of subordination:
Junior subordinated issues and senior subordinated issues are
rated the same. Global experience has shown that, in bankruptcy,
ultimate recoveries for different classes of subordinated instruments
tend to be similar--and poor. (Likewise, other things being equal,
we don't distinguish between hybrid capital issues that are cumulative
and those that are noncumulative, since there is little reason
to suppose recovery prospects of the two are materially different.
- When a holding
company issues debt, as is common Taiwan, the notching is relative
to our CCR on the holding company, which is typically lower than
the CCR on the main operating unit.
Rating
The Issue: Deferral
- Payment
risk can be heightened in the case of hybrid capital issues due
to:
- The right
of optional deferral, where management has the option under the
terms of the instrument to suspend or cancel distributions without
triggering a default;
- Mandatory
deferral, where, with the breaching of one or more predetermined
triggers, the issuer is required to suspend payments; and
- Regulators'
ability, in certain cases, to order companies to defer or cancel
payments.
- Our objective
is to fully reflect payment deferral risk in hybrid capital issue
ratings, whatever the potential driver of the deferral. As deferral
becomes an increasingly likely prospect, the gap between the CCR
and the hybrid capital instrument would widen to reflect the heightened
risk of deferral.
Optional
deferral
- We assume
that issuers will be loath to exercise their right of optional
deferral, given the negative reaction this evokes among investors
and hence the ramifications it can have for the issuer's future
access to capital markets. Deferral risk is heightened when the
issuer faces increased prospects of financial distress, such that
management's reluctance to defer may ultimately be overcome in
favor of the need to conserve cash. As referred to above, the
"pressure points" may differ for different types of
issuers, meaning the consideration of deferral may come at earlier
or later stages in the course of credit deterioration. One danger
sign is when a company curtails or eliminates its dividend on
common stock: This is sometimes a precursor to a deferral on equity
hybrids.
Mandatory
deferral
- Triggers
for mandatory deferral vary. Some consist of earnings-, cash flow-,
or capitalization-based financial ratio tests; others refer to
the issuer's incurrence of a loss during a defined period or the
failure to meet specified minimum regulatory capital requirements.
Still others tie the payment of the distribution on the equity
hybrid directly to the company's payment of the common stock dividend.
- Obviously,
the payment deferral risk for the hybrid capital issue investor
is higher when it would take only a minor and temporary shortfall
in profitability to cause the deferral, for example. On the other
hand, if it would take circumstances so dire for the trigger to
be breached that the issuer would likely be on the brink of bankruptcy,
then the payment risks for the hybrid capital issue investor would
not be materially different than they would be for debt holders.
Regulatory deferral
- In some
regulated financial services sectors, regulators have the authority
to direct companies to defer payments on equity hybrids based
on the regulators' own assessment of what is prudent. In certain
cases, banks have been ordered to defer even when they met all
regulatory capital requirements. Assessing the risk of deferral
in the case of a regulated company requires careful consideration
of sector- and country-specific factors, including precedents
of deferral ordered by the regulatory body in question. Especially
important is the identification of financial measures to which
the regulator is particularly sensitive.
- The authority
and intent of financial regulators to order deferral of payments
in certain circumstances-whether or not clearly defined-means
that most hybrid capital securities of regulated financial institutions
can be viewed as having de facto mandatory deferral. Regulated
financial institutions structure hybrids according to rules established
by national regulators for regulatory capital measures. This includes
the definitions of the capital ratios or performance measures
that would trigger payment deferral if breached. The triggers
for deferral-typically the regulatory minimum capital ratio for
banks, insurers and holding companies-are usually made explicit
in the covenants of the hybrid security. Less often, the trigger
is not explicit in the document but is understood by both issuer
and regulator.
Rating
The Issue: Factoring Payment Risk Into Issue Ratings
- In reflecting
payment/deferral risk in hybrid capital issue ratings, we evaluate
the different sources of deferral risk that are present and seek
to assess their combined significance. Where deferral is possible
but we believe the prospect of a deferral is relatively remote
for the foreseeable future, we take one notch from the CCR in
setting the issue rating, whether the CCR is rated at 'twBBB-'
or above, or rated 'twBB+' or below (subordination will increase
the notching, as explained in the prior section). A one-notch
differential is the typical treatment for issues that have optional
deferral alone. For example, the subordinated and optionally deferrable
issue of an issuer rated 'twBBB+' would generally be rated 'twBBB-'-one
notch for subordination and one notch for payment deferral risk.
If the issue were senior and deferrable (a rare but not unheard
of combination), the issue would be rated 'twBBB'. We take the
same approach even at the highest rating levels. (Note that a
subordinated and deferrable issue of a 'twAAA' rated issuer is
typically rated 'twAA'. Because there is no 'twAAA-' rating in
our rating scale, 'twAA' is two notches below 'twAAA'.)
- When we have
heightened concerns that the issuer may defer-whether due to the
exercise of its right to defer optionally, the breaching of a
mandatory deferral trigger, or the exercise of a regulator's prerogatives-we
increase the gap between the CCR and the issue rating. We do not
impose any arbitrary limit on the size of the gap. So, in an extreme
example, if the CCR of an issuer were rated at 'twBBB-' or above,
but we believed that there was a substantial risk that the payment
on the issuer's hybrid securities could be deferred within a few
quarters, the issue would have rated at 'twBB+' or lower level.
On the other hand, if the issuer faced the immediate prospect
of financial distress, yet we believed management remained determined-for
whatever reason-not to exercise the right to optionally defer,
we could, at least in theory, narrow the notching for deferral
risk.
- Combinations
of different forms of deferral may or may not increase deferral
risk. For example, if an issue has mandatory and optional deferability
and the mandatory triggers are defined so that they could be breached
without there necessarily having been fundamental erosion in the
issuer's credit quality, then the risks to investors would be
greater than if there were optional deferability alone. The same
would be true if the triggers were more reflective of fundamental
credit quality, but could be breached before the point where the
issuer would contemplate optional deferral. In either of these
cases, a lower issue rating would be warranted than if there were
optional deferability alone. In these circumstances we generally
add to the gap between the issue rating and the issuer credit
rating. On the other hand, if the mandatory trigger were sufficiently
remote that we believed it would be unlikely to be breached before
the company would otherwise have optionally deferred, then we
would not take away additional notches for the mandatory deferability
compared to what would be appropriate for the optional deferability
alone.
- If a mandatory
deferral trigger is defined in such a manner that we believed
the trigger would always be breached before the company would
otherwise consider deferring optionally, and if the company is
legally required to issue common shares immediately upon the breach
of the trigger, then we could conclude that deferral risk had
been effectively eliminated, and not notch down for deferral risk.
- In the case
of regulated financial institutions, explicit mandatory deferral
triggers do not add to deferral risk stemming from regulation
if-as is generally the case-the triggers just replicate the capital
standards that a regulator applies in determining whether to order
a deferral. Also, in the case of banks, we consider it particularly
unlikely that a company would exercise unilaterally its right
to defer optionally. Moreover, we would generally presume that
bank regulators would act preemptively to force banks to raise
capital (or divest some activities) to prevent regulatory capital
guidelines from being breached. Thus, in most instances we take
away only one notch for deferral risk in rating hybrid capital
issues of banks rated 'twBBB-' or above, even where there is a
combination of optional deferral and regulatory deferral risk.
Rating
The Issue: Default And Distress
- The definition
of our 'twC' long-term issue credit rating applies to issues on
which cash coupon payments have been deferred or eliminated as
permitted under the terms of the issue. And on the other hand,
the issuer is not bankrupt or insolvent and our credit rating
CCR on the company is not 'D', 'SD', or 'twR'. We will assign
a 'D' rating to issues that are in payment default, to issues
that have been subject to a distressed exchange, or when the issuer
has filed for bankruptcy or taken similar action.
Rating
The Issue: Government Support
- The policy
for rating the hybrid equity securities of government-supported
entities deserves particular mention. When TRC expects the government
to support a government-supported entity's debt obligations but
has less confidence that the support would be extended to the
government-supported entity's equity hybrids, then the base for
the notching of the equity hybrid issue rating is not just the
CCR (which factors in the imputed government support). The issuer's
stand-alone profile (absent government support factors, including
extraordinary intervention and rescue) is also a relevant rating
factor in these situations.
- Our approach
would be similar in the case of an entity whose CCR benefited
from support of a strong parent, but where we doubted whether
parental support would be extended to the subsidiary's hybrid
capital.
RELATED
CRITERIA AND RESEARCH
These criteria represent the specific application of fundamental
principles that define credit risk and ratings opinions. Their use
is determined by issuer- or issue-specific attributes as well as
TRC's assessment of the credit and, if applicable, structural risks
for a given issuer or issue rating. Methodology and assumptions
may change from time to time as a result of market and economic
conditions, issuer- or issue-specific factors, or new empirical
evidence that would affect our credit judgment
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