The rapid pace of the decline in revenue in conjunction with the difficultly of adjusting costs sufficiently quickly led to a sudden increase in liquidity needs.
The coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis was a major shock for the non-financial corporate (NFC) sector.
The pandemic and the associated containment measures translated into a
large drop in sales for firms. The rapid pace of the decline in revenue
in conjunction with the difficultly of adjusting costs sufficiently
quickly led to a sudden increase in liquidity needs. These liquidity
needs, if left unaddressed, could have easily morphed into broader
solvency issues, leading to a sharp increase in corporate defaults and
bankruptcies.
The COVID-19 pandemic hit the services sector and small firms particularly hard.
There is a high concentration of small businesses in contact-intensive
sectors. This creates additional challenges when assessing the
vulnerability of the euro area economy, as comprehensive information on
the health of small companies’ balance sheets typically becomes
available only with significant time lags. The information contained in
the Survey on the Access to Finance of Enterprises in the euro area
(SAFE) was particularly useful to fill, at least partially, the
information gap.
The timely and forceful policy response at national and EU level mitigated the short-term impact of the pandemic.
Fiscal, monetary and supervisory measures have substantially supported
corporates by preventing large corporate losses and a rise in
non-performing loans for banks. Government support to firms helped to
reduce their costs (for instance via job retention schemes) and provided
liquidity support, while monetary policy helped to provide favourable
financing conditions and supervisory policies freed up capital that
banks could use for lending. The effect of these policy measures is also
reflected in exceptionally low numbers of corporate insolvency cases
over the past two years.
Two years after the onset of the pandemic, the short-term
vulnerabilities of the corporate sector seem to have abated somewhat
amid the ongoing recovery, but risks remain, especially for smaller
firms and for sectors most affected by the pandemic. Corporate
revenues recovered after some of the strictest containment measures were
eased, thus also improving debt servicing capacity. At the same time,
weaker corporate balance sheets and heterogenous indebtedness across
firms pose risks to the recovery. Higher gross corporate debt, in
particular for those firms that also face an increase in net debt, may
hamper the capacity of firms to support the recovery via an increase in
capital spending, especially once policy support is phased out. The
higher debt ratios render firms vulnerable to potential shifts in risk
sentiment, a rise in real interest rates or a fall in profits. Weaker
corporate balance sheets also pose a risk for banks, potentially
activating adverse feedback loops and financial stability concerns
through increases in non-performing loans and corporate bankruptcies.
Aside from the COVID-19 pandemic, the corporate sector also faces broader structural challenges.
The pandemic has accelerated several structural transformations already
under way in the euro area economy. A non-exhaustive list of structural
challenges includes new forms of work (including remote working), the
use of e-commerce and digital technologies, a reconfiguration of global
value chains and the transition to a carbon-neutral economy. Such
changes require a comprehensive modernisation of firms’ capital stock,
which may be harder for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to
implement, partly owing to their pre-existing weaknesses compared with
larger firms.
This article is structured as follows. Section 2
reviews recent developments, focusing on vulnerabilities stemming from
corporate indebtedness. Section 3 looks at implications for corporate
insolvencies, complemented by Box 1, which views this through the lens
of bank asset quality. Section 4 looks at the possible investment
implications of increased levels of corporate indebtedness. Box 2
discusses some structural features of euro area SMEs in the context of
the COVID-19 pandemic. Section 5 concludes...
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