Fitch Ratings projects Asia-Pacific banks' asset quality to remain stable through 2026, supported by interest rate cuts and ongoing economic momentum. While pockets of risk persist, positive growth and declining unemployment underpin resilient banking sector performance, with cautious optimism amid varying country-specific conditions and structural challenges.
Fitch Ratings’ latest report on Asia-Pacific (APAC) banking sector asset quality highlights an overall stable outlook through 2026, supported by favorable macroeconomic trends and monetary easing. The report underscores a cautiously optimistic scenario with positive economic momentum helping to mitigate asset-quality risks for banks across the region.
Key Highlights
Stable Asset Quality Expected
Fitch anticipates a general reduction in impaired loans and non-performing assets (NPAs) as interest rate cuts take effect and economic activity sustains. Employment remains broadly stable, supporting borrowers’ repayment capacity and limiting credit deterioration.
Country-Specific Variability
Despite the overall stability, Fitch notes diversity within the APAC region. Countries like Vietnam and Sri Lanka benefit from robust credit growth and improving asset quality, while challenges persist in China and Hong Kong due to sluggish retail credit demand and pressure from the commercial property sector.
Chinese Banking Sector Outlook
China’s largest bank lenders face subdued credit growth and compressed net interest margins. However, policy support for the housing market and targeted recapitalization efforts are expected to prevent significant deterioration in asset quality.
Economic and Monetary Drivers
The easing of policy rates is reducing funding costs for banks, though margin pressures remain. The accommodative monetary stance and improving loan demand in select markets contribute to a stable credit environment.
Risks and Challenges
Structural issues such as geopolitical tensions, cyber vulnerabilities, climate risks, and potential disruptions in trade relationships introduce uncertainty. Banks with concentrated exposures or weaker capital buffers remain vulnerable.
Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) Boost
Fitch highlights a surge in M&A-related financing activity in APAC, which could strengthen banks’ loan books and profitability in 2025 and 2026 after prior years of decline.
Notable Updates
Positive corporate earnings and steady employment in key APAC economies underpin the credit outlook.
New Zealand banks are expected to see improved asset quality with rising employment and lower interest rates easing borrower stress.
The global environment remains sensitive to geopolitical developments and economic policy shifts, which could impact regional banks’ risk profiles.
Sources: Fitch Ratings official reports, International Banker, Business Standard, Bloomberg