UPDATE 1-Little subprime fallout for Asia banks, investors wary
(Adds details, quotes)
By Tony Munroe and Umesh Desai
HONG KONG, Aug 3 (Reuters) - Asian banks, domestically focused and risk averse after the Asia crisis, should see few losses from the U.S. subprime meltdown, rating agencies said, but investors worry lenders could get caught in the maelstrom.
Moody's Investors Service said on Friday that the impact of the subprime crisis on Asia's lenders would be limited, with the largest exposure among the biggest banks through holdings of mortgage-backed securities and collateralised debt obligations. [ID:nWNA7262]
Standard & Poor's said Japanese banks have about $8 billion of subprime-related securities, citing the Japanese Bankers Association, while a small number of financial services firms in Taiwan have a much smaller combined level of exposure. [ID:nSPWAcEJwa]
For almost all rated banks and insurers in Asia Pacific, subprime mortgage-related losses are likely to be "either minimal or manageable," S&P said.
"Asian banks are not lending directly to U.S. subprime borrowers," said Moody's analyst Deborah Schuler.
Still, investors in regional financial stocks remain nervous as bad news from the U.S. subprime crisis and a resulting credit crunch roil global markets.
Shares in Bank of China (3988.HK) fell as much as 2.3 percent on Friday, lagging the market, a day after Goldman Sachs warned in a note that the country's second-largest lender may hold subprime mortgage-backed securities in its U.S. portfolio.
On Thursday, Taiwan financial stocks fell to their lowest level in almost seven weeks after mid-sized Taiwan Life Insurance (2833.TW) said it had booked a T$428 million (US$13 million) loss after writing off its entire investment in a collapsed hedge fund managed by Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. BSC.N.
COMING CLEAN
Analysts expect more banks to come out of the closet and disclose subprime-related exposure when they report earnings.
Tahnoon Pasha, Hong Kong-based head of equity investments at MFC Global Investment Management, said banks that have invested in subprime-related securities may take a hit to the bottom line but will not be structurally weakened.
"It isn't going to put the companies at risk, but it may put earnings at risk for a period in time," Pasha said.
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. (8306.T), Japan's top bank, is the most exposed of the country's three large lenders to the subprime market, with about 300 billion yen (US$2.5 billion) in related instruments, mainly asset-backed securities, as of mid-July, a spokesman said.
Graeme Knowd, a banking analyst at CLSA in Tokyo, said Japan's banks have little exposure relative to their size and will not be forced to unload their holdings: "The Japanese banks can sit it out, they are not firesellers." Continued...




