Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04YEREVAN1745
2004-08-05 13:30:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Yerevan
Cable title:  

ARMENIA'S BANKING SECTOR: IT NEEDS MORE THAN

Tags:  ECON EFIN EAID AM 
pdf how-to read a cable
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 YEREVAN 001745 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON EFIN EAID AM
SUBJECT: ARMENIA'S BANKING SECTOR: IT NEEDS MORE THAN
REGULATION


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 YEREVAN 001745

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ECON EFIN EAID AM
SUBJECT: ARMENIA'S BANKING SECTOR: IT NEEDS MORE THAN
REGULATION



1. (U) Sensitive but unclassified. Please protect
accordingly. Not for internet distribution.

--------------
SUMMARY
--------------


2. (SBU) Armenia's Central Bank (CBA) has outlined a new
reform program to strengthen the banking sector. But bank
officials caution that legal and regulatory reforms alone
would do little to improve bank intermediation. Despite
significant consolidation and the recent closure of
insolvent banks, Armenia's banks still struggle to attract
deposits and are even worse at lending money. Improving the
banking sector is a priority for the government and the
international donor community, as high lending rates and
poor access to capital hamper small enterprises and raise
costs for all businesses. While touting reforms, CBA
officials cite not the regulatory environment but cultural
resistance to banking and a strong reluctance of businesses
to open their books as the greatest impediments to a strong
intermediating banking sector. End Summary.

-------------- --------------
CENTRAL BANK SETS OUT REFORMS TO IMPROVE INTERMEDIATION
-------------- --------------


3. (SBU) Armenia's banks do a poor job of attracting
deposits and lending money: the assets of Armenia's 19
solvent banks equal only 17 percent of GDP (compared to 70
percent in the U.S.). We met recently with CBA Board Member
Vache Gabrielyan to discuss the CBA's reform strategy to
increase intermediation by raising the confidence of
depositors in banks, and of banks in borrowers. In 2004 the
CBA will continue measures that force banks to be stronger
combined with new legislation to strengthen creditor rights
and a new deposit guarantee program. The CBA will propose a
draft law on the registration of collateral along with
legislative amendments to allow non-judicial foreclosures in
order to encourage collateral based lending. Currently the
difficulty of foreclosing on collateral, due to court
inefficiencies and inadequate laws on collateral and secured
transactions, discourages banks from lending to unknown
borrowers.

-------------- --------------
SOUNDER BANKS STILL MUST WORK TO ATTRACT DEPOSITS
-------------- --------------


4. (SBU) Over the last two years, the Central Bank
strengthened the banking sector by liquidating insolvent

banks and raising statutory capital requirements. Even
though banks are now sounder, they still must work to
attract deposits. As banks expand services and
technologies, and as insolvent and uncompetitive banks are
weeded out, Armenians should become more willing to save
their money in banks. Persistent, if unjustified, worries
over the soundness of banks combined with privacy concerns
and the fear of government monitoring keep much of Armenia's
savings out of banks and in the cookie jar.

--------------
BANK LENDING REMAINS WEAK
--------------


5. (SBU) Banks are even worse at lending money than they are
at attracting deposits: the safest commercial banks like
HSBC are flush with cash. While businesses cite high
interest rates (averaging 19 percent) as the primary
obstacle to borrowing, banks cite the lack of good
borrowers. Nick Gilmore, the CEO of HSBC, comments that
Armenian firms don't want to share their books with their
banker. "Armenians keep several sets of books," he says,
"one for the tax authorities, one for their partners --
because they are all cheating their partners -- and one for
their wives. We want the real books and ultimately they
don't want anyone to have real records. They will offer
collateral, but we are not in the collateral business. We
don't want property, we want to know our client."

--------------
TRUST, BUT HOW TO VERIFY?
--------------


6. (SBU) In Armenia, knowing your client can be hard to do.
In a culture where entrepreneurs look to family, clients and
personal connections -- not banks -- for working capital,
potential borrowers lack reliable financial records and
adequate business plans. The fact that many Armenians are
paid in cash, have no bank accounts and have likely
misrepresented their incomes on any government forms gives
banks very little verifiable information on which to base
decisions. Banks lack expertise in evaluating risk anyway,
and base their decisions on their own histories with clients
rather than the clients' ability to service the loans.

--------------
COMMENT: IT'S A QUESTION OF TRUST
--------------


7. (SBU) The greatest burdens on Armenia's banking sector
are cultural. Historical mistrust of banks persists and
accurate bookkeeping is anathema to local businesses.
(Note: In 2003 Armenia had only 1 percent profit tax
revenues despite 14 percent GDP growth. End Note.)
Paradoxically, potential borrowers would rather risk
collateral than provide information: Armenia's largest
enterprises eschew borrowing from HSBC, the bank with the
lowest lending interest rates. Armenia is a cash economy,
and people and businesses are reluctant to submit their
accounts to scrutiny. Banks understandably balk at lending
money to consumers who keep no bank accounts and to
businesses who show no profit. The dearth of lending to
small and medium size enterprises deprives banks of the
broad portfolios, not mention experience and expertise,
which would make lending at lower rates profitable.

GODFREY