Crediting strategy for small and medium companies in Romania in 2007.
David, Oana ; Osiceanu, Sanda ; Mihai, Valia Maria 等
1. INTRODUCTION
One of the main activities of the commercial banks is the crediting
of population and companies of either field, including the technical
one. The analysis of such banking exercise has been performed since
crediting entered economy, in order to make an assessment of this
activity's evolution and profitableness.
In the field there are numerous statistics drafted for semesters
and years, as well as for different credit categories for population and
for small and medium companies (SMC).
This paper presents a statistics of the credit granted to the SMCs
in Romania, in 2007 and attempts to show the situation of the Romanian
banking market. In conclusion, the authors have tried to display the
disadvantages on the Romanian banking market in the activity of
crediting of both the population and companies, including the ones in
the technical field.
2. CONTAIN PAPER
The credit relations generate the crediting as a method of
financing the resources need. It is a modality of constituting the
financial resources need as a completion of their own--but, most of the
time, the credit represents the only financing source for a business.
(Stroe & Armeanu, 2001) As still a sole financing source is the
credit for formation of the abilities in order to be able to cover the
financial needs during the year peak periods.
The essential requirement for calling and utilization of crediting,
as means of completion your own financial resources, is the efficiency
of using these agents, so that, upon the reimbursement time, all the
loan amounts be returned and the relevant interest be paid accordingly.
The wide range of the crediting situations has imposed, from
practical reasons, the classification of credits, as these are numerous:
creditor, debtor, credit object, crediting source, method of available
supply formation, crediting period, etc.
The Romanian banking market displays a multitude of credit forms,
both for population and companies, including small and medium companies.
Thus, various commercial banks grant the following credit categories to
the small and medium companies:
* Transilvania Bank grants:
** 'Credit for small and medium companies, 0% interest',
meant to cover the short term payment points;
** 'Credit for SMCs, 1 hour', designed to meet the
expectations of the companies that are looking at a rapid and simplified
access to the bank's financial support;
** 'Credit for SMCs START UP', meant to start a business;
** 'Credit for SMCs, Discounting 100%', for companies
that need financing resources for the development and growth of their
current activity;
* OTP Bank grants:
** 'Short-term cash credit for small and medium
companies' and 'Credit line for small and medium
companies' destined for current activity financing;
** 'Credit for small and medium companies from BERD and EU
sources', utilized for financing both new projects and updating or
extension of the existent business, with the following destinations:
investments projects and operating capital;
* B.R.D. grants 'Export Credit' in foreign currency,
representing a method of financing the small and medium companies needs
derived from the current activity, which cannot be covered by the
ordinary formulae of collecting the debts;
* C.E.C. grants 'Credit for small and medium companies from
BERD and European Union sources', used to finance the investments
credits, stocks, revolving credit line, etc, with the following
destinations: investments projects, operating capital required for
activity of production and services, new projects, the updating or
extension of the existent businesses.
Romania's accession to European Union has favorably impacted
the banking sector, as the investing activity in this field is extremely
intense. More financial groups in the community region have considered
that the local business environment is suitable for opening further
units.
Besides the commercial banks in Romania before 2007, the accession
lead to the opening a series of new branches of foreign banks focused on
the crediting of the retail activity and companies'. (Draguta,
2004) Among these, Bank of Cyprus pledged to itself to focus on
corporations that the mother-bank serves in Cyprus and Greece. At the
same time, the bank is trying to attract clients from the medium
companies sector.
Millennium Bank estimates that it will have total investments in
Romania in the amount of 300 million euro until 2011. This bank wishes
to set itself apart as a universal bank, the target clientele being
represented by both small, medium and large companies and population.
The credits aimed at companies amount up to 70 billion lei, out of
which more than half are foreign currency financing, namely 37.4 billion
lei. The loans attracted from the banks only represent 8% of the
companies' liabilities, when the financing from the
mother-companies abroad keeps a high level, being a half of the
corporate credit balance.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Almost a half (49.05%) of the loans granted by the banks to the
small and medium companies are treasury credits, having the
company's cash flow as a guarantee, i.e. its income and liquid
assets, and 31.5% of financing are meant to acquire equipment. Most of
the treasury credits are current financing, but in the classification
drafted by the Romanian commercial banks, the current credits are only
1.08%.
The data provided by the National Bank of Romania also show a high
percentage for the credits granted to the small and medium companies for
real estate, with 9.64% of balance, whilst the credits for export are
only 0.07%.
Although the financing for the small and medium companies represent
63% of the volume of credits granted to the companies in Romania, only
14% of the small and medium companies have filed for bank loans. The
small and medium companies sector has a great growth potential, but its
evolution is dependent on the inclination of these banks towards these
companies and the feasibility studies quality.
Along the implementation of Basel II capital agreement, which
represents the capital adjusting regulation depending on the risks
related to the bank activity in effect since 01.01.2008, the risk
associated with the small and medium companies is lowering, a decision
that is based on the large exposure variance.
In reality, both small and medium companies and population are
facing a series of incorrect practices, from a legal point of view, of
the commercial banks and the other financial institutions. (Jurvale,
2000)
A separate category of the incorrect commercial practices in
Romania is constituted by the stipulation of abusive clauses in the
pre-formulated standard contract concluded with the population and the
companies, starting from the privileged position that the banks and the
other financing institutions towards the consumers. Thus, we may
enumerate:
* the right of the bank or of the financial institution to
unilaterally modify the contract clauses without a proper reason;
* the interdiction or restriction of the consumer right to
terminate the contract or unilaterally renounce, when the bank or the
financial institution is entitled to it;
* the right of the bank or the financial institution to raise the
service price, without granting to the consumer the right of terminating
the contract, in case the final price is too high in comparison to the
price convened upon the contract conclusion.
One of the widely used elements in the incorrect practices of the
commercial banks or other financial institutions is the credit interest,
which includes two aspects:
* former, the income of capital, i.e. the equivalent of the credit
usage, and the interest in this case has been assimilated with the
capital specific income;
* latter, is the one of penalty or reimbursement for the damage
caused to the creditor by a late honoring the credit rate. In this case,
it is about credit related penalty interests, which in the contract is
similar with the delay penalties calculated by applying the value of the
outstanding amount of a percentage between 0.5 and 2% per day.
As far as the interest in the role of a price for the granted
credit is concerned, the sale of credits with promotional interests,
fixed and initially low, but which become variable and rise suddenly or
progressively, based on the contractual clauses--an incorrect practice
by deceiving omission, in the sense that the sponsor omits an essential
information required for the consumer to take a decision related to the
credit or offers this information in an illegible way, in an ambiguous
method or a rushed one, which makes the consumer request the credit, a
decision which he would have not taken otherwise.
As far as the penalty interests applied to the consumers who are
late with payments, parties may also determine, by contract, the
extension of the damage that the creditor will bear as a consequence of
late payments honoring, as well as the damage percentage that will cover
it, before the damage occurrence. (Bistriceanu,, 2007)
These interests may be considered abusive when the paid amounts are
out of proportionally high. In this sense, in the bank system entirety,
the yearly average of the penalty interests is between 5 and 7% over the
credit base interest (unlike European Union, where the average is 1%).
Under conditions of adding these percentage points to the interest-cost
of the credit of 7-9%, this issue may lead to a double penalty amount
compares to what normally pays a client for a credit.
These penalties may not be considered disproportionate, since they
are aligned to the international practices and because the banks have
various costs, 'which may be quantified, at any moment', for a
late rate payment, 'costs that may harm the image of a bank
3. CONCLUSION
Upon analysis of the credits for small and medium companies, there
is ascertained a diversification of them compared to the previous years,
the majority being held by the treasury credits and the credits meant
for equipment acquisition, which represents 50% of the total credits
granted to small and medium companies in 2007.
The penalty interests are way over the ones practiced in the
European Union, and the banking officials should understand that they
need to align themselves to the new codes of good practice in European
Union and to self-regulate regarding the costs. A species of the credit
cost is represented by the prepayment commission, whose quantum is also
considered to be abusive in comparison to the one adopted by the EU (on
average, 2-3% versus 1%).
4. REFERENCES
Bistriceanu, Gh. (2007). Little encyclopedia in finance, money,
ensuring, Publisher Universitara, Bucharest
Draguta, V. (2004). Practical landing in the firm finance,
Publisher IRECSON, Bucharest
Jurvale, V. (2000). Fiscal methods and technics, Publisher Rokris,
Bucharest
Stroe, R.; Armeanu, D. (2001). Finance, Second Edition, Publisher
ASE, Bucharest
***, (2007). Static Dates of the National Institute of Statistic
from Romania