New Zealand's banking sector, like Australia's, is still too reliant on foreign funding, says ratings agency Standard & Poor's.
S&P said in a report yesterday on the New Zealand banking sector that the system had "material reliance" on overseas wholesale funding, although the position had progressively improved since 2009 on the back of increased retail deposits.
"Although the banks are maintaining good levels of liquidity, any prolonged disruption in offshore wholesale borrowing markets is likely to escalate funding pressure on the banks and put pressure on them meeting minimum core funding ratio requirements, with the minimum set to increase to 75 per cent [from 70 per cent] on January 1, 2013," S&P analyst Peter Sikora said in the report.
The Reserve Bank's core funding ratio was designed to reduce the banks' reliance on short-term overseas borrowing.
The ratio stipulates that banks must secure at least 75 per centof their funding from eitherretail deposits or wholesale sources - such as bonds - with durations of at least a year.