Source - LSE Regulatory
RNS Number : 2782J
ASA International Group PLC
26 April 2022
 

Press release

 

ASA International Group plc March 2022 business update

 

Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 26 April 2022 - ASA International, ('ASA International', the 'Company' or the 'Group'), one of the world's largest international microfinance institutions, today provides the following update of the impact of Covid-19 on its business operations as at 31 March 2022.

·    Liquidity remains high with approximately USD 103m of unrestricted cash and cash equivalents across the Group.

·    The pipeline of funding deals under negotiation totalled approximately USD 205m.

·    With the exception of India and Myanmar, all other operating subsidiaries continued to achieve collection efficiency of more than 90% with 9 countries achieving more than 95%.

·    India collections improved to 81%, despite the substantial overdue collections and moratoriums provided to clients. Collection efficiency, excluding instalments due from clients receiving the one-time loan restructuring offered by the Reserve Bank of India ('RBI'), increased to 116%.

·    The benchmark PAR>30 for the Group, including off-book loans and excluding loans overdue more than 365 days, remained broadly stable (from 6.8% to 6.7%).

·    The PAR>30 for the Group's operating subsidiaries, excluding India and Myanmar, remained at 1.9%.

·    Excluding all loans which have been overdue for more than 180 days and, as a result, have been fully provided for, PAR>30 remained at 4.6%.

·    Disbursements as percentage of collections exceeded 100% in 10 countries. The decreasing percentage in India was primarily due to the strategic decision to reduce disbursements.

·    With the number of clients broadly stable at 2.4m (slightly lower than in February and 5% lower than in March 2021), the continuing strategic focus in India on collections and the currency depreciation in Sri Lanka and Ghana, Gross OLP decreased to USD 417m (2% lower than in February 2022 and 13% lower than in March 2021).

·    The moratorium amount decreased to USD 21.7m, and is composed of the restructured loans of certain distressed clients in India as per the RBI guidelines. No other operating subsidiary granted moratoriums.

 

Health impact of COVID-19 on staff and clients

 

·    Since March 2020, the number of staff members confirmed as infected by Covid increased to 561 of over 13,047 staff, with two deaths. Confirmed infections amongst 2.4m clients increased to 22,864 from 22,791 in the previous month, resulting in 698 deaths since the start of the pandemic. Of the 698 client deaths across the Group, 452 took place in Myanmar, with one death occurring in March 2022.

 

Funding 

·    Unrestricted cash and cash equivalents remained high at approximately USD 103m.

·    The Company secured approximately USD 19m of new loans from local and international lenders in March 2022.

·    The majority of the Company's USD 205m pipeline of future wholesale loans are supported by agreed term sheets and/or draft loan documentation. The terms and conditions of the remaining loans are being negotiated with lenders.

Collection efficiency until 31 March 2022(1)  

Countries

Oct/21

Nov/21

Dec/21

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 

India

70%

69%

74%

76%

76%

81%

 

Pakistan

99%

99%

99%

99%

100%

100%

 

Sri Lanka

91%

92%

94%

93%

93%

94%

 

The Philippines

97%

97%

97%

98%

98%

99%

 

Myanmar

68%(2)

75%(2)

78%(2)

78%(2)

72%(2)

72%(2)

 

Ghana

100%

99%

99%

99%

99%

100%

 

Nigeria

96%

97%

96%

95%

96%

96%

 

Sierra Leone

93%

92%

92%

92%

92%

94%

 

Kenya

100%

100%

100%

99%

100%

100%

 

Uganda

94%

98%

100%

100%

100%

100%

 

Tanzania

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

 

Rwanda

97%

97%

97%

97%

97%

97%

 

Zambia

99%

99%

99%

100%

100%

98%

 

(1) Collection efficiency refers to actual collections from clients divided by realizable collections for the period. It is calculated as follows: the sum of actual regular collections, actual overdue collections and actual advance payments divided by the sum of realizable regular collections, actual overdue collections and actual advance payments. Under this definition collection efficiency cannot exceed 100%.

(2) Collections are impacted by the ongoing lockdowns and civil unrest in some areas of our operations.

 

·    Collection efficiency across the Group increased or remained broadly stable compared to the previous month in all countries.

·    Collections in India improved to 81%, despite the substantial overdue collections and moratoriums provided to clients. Collection efficiency, excluding instalments due from clients receiving the one-time loan restructuring, increased to 116%.

·    Collection efficiency in India, including regular and overdue collections as well as advance payments, increased to 113% as a percentage of the regular, realizable collections, including advance payments. The substantial difference is due to the Group's policy that any loan instalment paid is first credited against the oldest outstanding amount overdue. This has an adverse impact on India's monthly collection efficiency, which is further aggravated by the relatively long duration of the loans disbursed in India. This adjusted collection efficiency metric illustrates that most clients in India continue to make payments on their loans due.

 

 

Loan portfolio quality up to and including March 2022(3, 4, 5)  

 

 Gross OLP (in USDm)

 

 Non-overdue loans

 

 PAR>30 less PAR>180

 

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

India (total)

      111

      107

      103

 

68.8%

69.7%

70.1%

 

11.1%

10.2%

9.3%

Pakistan

        81

        83

        83

 

99.7%

99.7%

99.7%

 

0.2%

0.2%

0.2%

Sri Lanka

          8

          8

          6

 

85.3%

85.9%

86.7%

 

3.9%

4.1%

4.0%

Philippines

        46

        47

        47

 

94.9%

95.7%

96.3%

 

2.0%

1.9%

1.6%

Myanmar

        21

        21

        21

 

64.3%

58.5%

57.7%

 

1.0%

22.7%

29.3%

Ghana

        46

        44

        41

 

99.2%

99.3%

99.3%

 

0.3%

0.2%

0.2%

Nigeria

        37

        37

        37

 

90.9%

90.6%

90.3%

 

3.4%

3.6%

3.9%

Sierra Leone

          7

          7

          7

 

72.3%

71.1%

65.8%

 

6.5%

7.1%

6.8%

Kenya

        17

        18

        18

 

98.6%

98.6%

98.6%

 

0.5%

0.6%

0.5%

Uganda

        10

        10

        11

 

90.7%

91.7%

92.9%

 

1.9%

0.9%

0.4%

Tanzania

        36

        37

        38

 

99.1%

99.1%

99.1%

 

0.2%

0.1%

0.2%

Rwanda

          3

          3

          3

 

92.6%

92.4%

93.1%

 

3.0%

3.2%

3.1%

Zambia

          2

          2

          2

 

98.2%

97.7%

96.8%

 

0.5%

0.8%

1.1%

Group

      425

      424

      417

 

87.5%

87.7%

87.9%

 

3.8%

4.6%

4.6%

 

 PAR>30

 

 PAR>90

 

 PAR>180

 

 

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 

India (total)

19.3%

17.1%

15.4%

 

11.6%

9.9%

8.7%

 

8.2%

6.9%

6.2%

 

Pakistan

0.2%

0.2%

0.2%

 

0.2%

0.1%

0.1%

 

0.0%

0.0%

0.0%

 

Sri Lanka

6.6%

6.9%

6.6%

 

4.0%

4.3%

4.2%

 

2.8%

2.8%

2.6%

 

Philippines

2.5%

2.7%

2.8%

 

1.9%

2.0%

2.1%

 

0.6%

0.8%

1.2%

 

Myanmar

1.6%

23.3%

29.8%

 

1.0%

0.9%

1.0%

 

0.6%

0.5%

0.5%

 

Ghana

0.3%

0.3%

0.3%

 

0.2%

0.2%

0.2%

 

0.1%

0.1%

0.1%

 

Nigeria

5.4%

5.8%

6.2%

 

3.6%

3.8%

4.0%

 

2.0%

2.2%

2.3%

 

Sierra Leone

8.7%

9.5%

9.5%

 

5.5%

6.2%

6.8%

 

2.2%

2.4%

2.7%

 

Kenya

1.0%

1.1%

1.0%

 

0.8%

0.8%

0.7%

 

0.5%

0.5%

0.4%

 

Uganda

2.9%

2.4%

2.0%

 

2.8%

2.3%

1.9%

 

0.9%

1.4%

1.6%

 

Tanzania

0.4%

0.4%

0.4%

 

0.4%

0.3%

0.3%

 

0.3%

0.3%

0.2%

 

Rwanda

4.8%

5.1%

5.1%

 

3.2%

3.3%

3.5%

 

1.8%

1.9%

2.0%

 

0.8%

1.1%

1.4%

 

0.5%

0.5%

0.6%

 

0.2%

0.3%

0.3%

 

Group

6.4%

6.8%

6.7%

 

4.0%

3.5%

3.1%

 

2.6%

2.2%

2.1%

 

 

(3)  Gross OLP includes the off-book BC and DA model, excluding interest receivable and before deducting ECL provisions and modification loss.

(4)  PAR>x is the percentage of outstanding customer loans with at least one instalment payment overdue x days, excluding loans more than 365 days overdue, to Gross OLP including off-book loans. Loans overdue more than 365 days now comprise 3% of the Gross OLP.

(5)  The table "PAR>30 less PAR>180" shows the percentage of outstanding client loans with a PAR greater than 30 days, less those loans which have been fully provided for.

·    PAR>30 for the Group remained broadly stable (from 6.8% to 6.7%).

·    Credit exposure of the India off-book BC portfolio of USD 33.7m is capped at 5%. The included off-book DA portfolio of USD 1.6m has no credit exposure.

 

Disbursements vs collections of loans until 31 March 2022(6)  

Countries

Oct/21

Nov/21

Dec/21

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 

India

39%

85%

88%

78%

65%

62%

 

Pakistan

100%

98%

100%

100%

96%

100%

 

Sri Lanka

86%

100%

113%

70%

115%

122%

 

The Philippines

90%

90%

81%

80%

93%

104%

 

Myanmar

73%

90%

95%

99%

99%

116%

 

Ghana

111%

114%

108%

74%

110%

115%

 

Nigeria

128%

134%

93%

71%

98%

98%

 

Sierra Leone

112%

112%

110%

97%

102%

113%

 

Kenya

96%

103%

55%

95%

101%

113%

 

Uganda

115%

121%

69%

81%

112%

118%

 

Tanzania

107%

109%

107%

114%

112%

110%

 

Rwanda

101%

105%

98%

65%

80%

107%

 

Zambia

110%

111%

109%

76%

80%

109%

 

(6) Disbursements vs collections refers to actual loan disbursements made to clients divided by total amounts collected from clients in the period.

 

·    Disbursements as percentage of collections exceeded 100% in 10 countries. The decreasing percentage in India was primarily due to the strategic decision to reduce disbursements.

 

Development of Clients and Outstanding Loan Portfolio until 31 March 2022 

 

 Clients (in thousands)

 Delta

 Gross OLP (in USDm)

 Delta

Countries

Mar/21

Feb/22

Mar/22

Mar/21-Mar/22

Feb/22-Mar/22

Mar/21

Feb/22

Mar/22

Mar/21-Mar/22 USD

Mar/21-Mar/22 CC (7)

Feb/22-Mar/22 USD

India

737

498

476

-35%

-4%

180

107

103

-43%

-41%

-4%

Pakistan

442

530

541

22%

2%

74

83

83

11%

33%

-1%

Sri Lanka

58

52

52

-9%

1%

9

8

6

-37%

-7%

-29%

The Philippines

319

295

299

-6%

2%

53

47

47

-11%

-5%

0%

Myanmar

131

111

112

-14%

0%

30

21

21

-28%

-9%

2%

Ghana

155

161

162

5%

1%

47

44

41

-11%

15%

-6%

Nigeria

258

245

241

-6%

-2%

33

37

37

13%

23%

0%

Sierra Leone

39

43

42

6%

-2%

5

7

7

31%

52%

2%

Kenya

102

120

123

20%

2%

15

18

18

24%

30%

4%

Uganda

83

93

95

15%

1%

8

10

11

29%

26%

5%

Tanzania

133

185

190

43%

3%

24

37

38

59%

60%

3%

Rwanda

18

18

18

-1%

-1%

3

3

3

21%

25%

3%

Zambia

7

16

16

133%

4%

0.6

2

2

253%

188%

1%

Total

2,481

2,368

2,368

-5%

-0.01%

480

424

417

-13%

-3%

-2%

 

(7) Constant currency ('CC') implies conversion of local currency results to USD with the exchange rate from the beginning of the period.

·    With the number of clients broadly stable at 2.4m, the continuing strategic focus in India on only collections and the currency depreciation in Sri Lanka and, Ghana Gross OLP decreased to USD 417m (2% lower than in February 2022 and 13% lower than in March 2021).

 

Selected moratoriums(8) on loan repayments until 31 March 2022

 

 Clients under moratorium (in thousands)

 

Countries

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

As % of Total Clients

India

205

205

205

43%

Group

205

205

205

9%

 

 

 Moratorium amounts (USD thousands)

 

 

Countries

Jan/22

Feb/22

Mar/22

 March Moratoriums as % of OLP

 As % of Total Moratoriums

India

25,894

23,730

21,705

21%

100%

Group

25,894

23,730

21,705

5%

100%

 

(8) Moratoriums relate to clients who have received an extension for the payment of one or more loan instalments during the month.

·    Moratoriums on loan repayments relate primarily to approximately 43% of clients in India, who accepted to benefit from the one-time debt restructuring scheme established by the RBI and confirmed in September 2021. See RBI Covid-19 Restructuring Guidelines. 

·    The moratorium amount across the Group decreased to USD 21.7m, which represents 5% of the Group's Gross OLP.

Key events in April 2022

·    In Sri Lanka measures have been taken including restricting loan sizes in order to prevent clients from over-borrowing due to the economic crisis.

·    Other than the existing partial lockdown and curfews in Myanmar, the Company is not aware of any further restrictions implemented in its operating countries as a result of the emergence of the Omicron variant up until 21 April 2022.

 

Please note that, while the Company's operational performance appears to gradually normalize in most countries except for India and Myanmar, the risk of additional challenges to our operations should not be underestimated, due to (i) the still relatively high infection rates, (ii) the current lack of available vaccines as well as vaccine hesitancy in most of our operating countries, (iii) the risk of the introduction of more infectious Covid variants in our operating countries, and (iv) the associated disruption this may cause to the businesses of our clients.

Enquiries:

ASA International Group plc

Investor Relations                                                                                                                        +31 6 2030 0139

Véronique Schyns                                                                                           vschyns@asa-international.com

 

About ASA International Group plc

ASA International Group plc (ASAI: LN) is one of the world's largest international microfinance institutions, with a strong commitment to financial inclusion and socioeconomic progress. The company provides small, socially responsible loans to low-income, financially underserved entrepreneurs, predominantly women, across South Asia, South East Asia, West and East Africa.

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