By Elena Fabrichnaya, Katya Golubkova and Andrey Ostroukh
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Russian central bank is developing new criteria for a maximum debt level for domestic companies to prevent any possible systemic risk at an early stage, Elizaveta Danilova, head of the bank's financial stability department, told Reuters.
The central bank is bolstering financial sector stability after Western sanctions and a sharp drop in oil prices in 2014 triggered a rapid rouble fall, something that increased the corporate sector's debt burden since many loans were denominated in foreign currencies.
"There should be systemic criteria, for example, a ratio of a company's debt to gross domestic product in order to identify not only large borrowers for banks but to spot problems in large firms that can trigger systemic risks," Danilova said.
Next year, the central bank together with commercial banks it regulates will continue working on a specific template for such criteria, Danilova said.
Danilova, 35, who joined the central bank in 2009 as an economist and was promoted to head of the financial stability department in 2018, said the decision on whether to implement such criteria would depend on how fast, if at all, large companies' debts are mounting.
The corporate loans-to-GDP ratio stood at 32.1% at the start of 2019, up from 30.8% in early 2014 before Western sanctions were imposed on Russia but down from 40.1% at the start of 2016, according to the central bank's data.
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The central bank also aims to cool down consumer lending growth by tightening banking capital requirements.
This should help bring consumer lending growth to below 17.8% this year and to around 10% in 2020 from more than 20% last year, Danilova said.
As major central banks cut rates to boost economic growth, investors seek higher yields and are eager to take on more risky strategies, the Russian central bank is focusing on the "importance of maintaining the stability of the domestic economy and the financial sector", Danilova said.
Along with its global peers, the central bank cut rates this year as inflation slipped below its 4% target, but it is widely expected to complete its easing cycle in 2020.
Danilova played down the risks of a possible outflow of foreign money from Russia's OFZ bonds once the central bank stops cutting rates, something that was fuelling demand for rouble-denominated bonds over the past year.
"It is possible that the OFZ market will still remain attractive for foreign investors," Danilova said, adding that it will depend on the risk-to-yield ratio as well as on external market factors.