Despite substantial losses in the sectors most affected by the pandemic, total corporate credit loss rates (ie losses in relation to the stock of debt) could fall short of those during the GFC because these sectors account for a smaller share of corporate borrowing than at that time.
Key takeaways
- This article provides a framework to
translate sectoral macroeconomic scenarios into sectoral corporate
credit losses, and applies it to the G7 economies, China and Australia.
- Because the pandemic has affected some
sectors more severely than others, projected credit losses reflecting
sectoral growth paths are very different from those based on projections
of aggregate GDP growth alone.
Introduction
The Covid pandemic triggered the largest economic downturn since the
Great Depression. Although the macroeconomic outlook is currently more
favourable than it was at the peak of the crisis in the spring of 2020,
the second wave of the pandemic is placing an additional strain on the
recovery and reinforcing existing vulnerabilities, at least in some of
the major advanced economies.
Non-financial corporate (NFC) bankruptcy rates remain fairly low in
most countries, despite the sharp decline in economic activity
(Banerjee, Cornelli and Zakrajšek (2020), IMF (2020a)). However, they
are expected to rise as measures to support credit are wound back, new
consumption habits and business practices accelerate the downsizing of
specific sectors, and some firms run out of liquidity buffers (eg
Banerjee, Illes, Kharroubi and Serena (2020)). The looming increase in
corporate bankruptcies will generate credit losses that will need to be
absorbed, either by the financial system or by taxpayers.
This article assesses potential corporate credit losses at the
sectoral level for the G7 countries, China and Australia. On average,
corporate credit accounts for slightly more than half of total private
non-financial credit in these countries (ranging from 31% of total
credit in Australia to 73% in China) and typically incurs larger credit
losses during recessions than household credit.1 As
such, the outlook for corporate credit has a significant bearing on
overall assessments of the health of the financial system. We project
credit losses, defined as recognised impairments on bank and non-bank
debt, until the end of 2022, assuming that the pandemic will have played
out by then and its impact on credit losses will have materialised.2
We proceed in three steps. First, we construct sectoral economic
projections for each of the nine economies in our sample following the
approach in Rees (2020) (Box A).3
Specifically, we use a macroeconomic model with a rich industry
structure in both demand and production to estimate the economic
disturbances ("exogenous shocks") that explain the path of activity
since the start of the pandemic.4
Conditional on assumptions of how these disturbances play out, we then
use the model to project the evolution of sectoral output for each
country up to 2023.
In the second step, we combine data on bonds and bank loans to derive
corporate debt by sector for each of the G7 countries, China and
Australia (Box B). The construction of sectoral corporate debt fills a data gap in the public domain.
In the third step, we draw on existing estimates from the literature
on the GDP sensitivity of credit loss rates (ie losses in relation to
the stock of corporate debt) for banks (Hardy and Schmieder (2013); see
also Box C)
to translate our sectoral output projections into projected credit loss
rates. In doing so, we assume that the historical sensitivity of bank
credit loss rates to aggregate GDP is the same across sectors as well as
across bonds and bank loans. We then scale these sectoral credit loss
rates using our estimates of sectoral debt to project total credit
losses by sector and country.
We reach three key conclusions. First, corporate credit loss rates
could rise substantially in sectors most affected by the pandemic. The
sectoral dispersion in credit loss rates is likely to be wider than
during the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2007–09 because of unevenness
in sectoral economic conditions as well as the tendency for credit
losses to rise more than proportionally with output shortfalls. Second,
aggregate corporate credit loss rates are likely to fall short of those
sustained during the GFC, in large part because the sectors most
affected by the Covid pandemic account for a comparably small share of
total credit. Third, projected credit losses based on sectoral growth
paths are larger than those based on aggregate GDP data alone. This
highlights the importance of taking account of sectoral differences in
economic conditions and credit exposures when estimating the
implications of an uneven recession for corporate credit losses.....
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