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International

Fitch Sees Manageable Risk in APAC Insurer Private Credit Exposure

Fitch Ratings says private credit exposure among major rated Asia-Pacific insurers remains broadly contained, with allocations still below 5% of total assets or around 10% of equity capital, including contractual service margin, in 2025.While positions have climbed over the past two to three years, Fitch said the shift has not materially altered overall portfolio risk profiles.The agency noted insurers are relying on tighter safeguards, including diversification across managers, borrowers, sectors and regions, alongside conservative sector choices and limits on leverage. Portfolios are mainly focused on senior secured and asset-backed loans, with regular checks on valuations, credit changes and recoveries due to the illiquid nature of the asset class.Fitch added that regulatory reforms and accounting changes, including risk-based capital frameworks and IFRS 17 and IFRS 9, have supported the allocation trend by improving capital efficiency.

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Asia

Market Chatter: ADB to Trim ASEAN Growth Forecasts as US-Iran War Drags On

The Asian Development Bank's (ADB) previous "early stabilization" scenario is no longer valid amid continued war in the Middle East, The Star reported Tuesday, citing ADB chief economist Albert Park's address to reporters.This prompts a revision of the earlier outlook, he reportedly said, as the conflict has stretched beyond initial expectations. Under updated projections, regional growth is now seen slowing to 4.7% in 2026 and 4.8% in 2027, while inflation forecasts have also been revised higher to 5.2% this year.Park warned that energy markets remain under pressure, with gas prices up around 30% and diesel rising even more sharply, while fertilizer costs have surged, raising risks for food and industrial supply chains. He also cautioned that prolonged disruption could keep oil prices elevated, with scenarios showing averages near $96 per barrel in 2026 and even higher in worst-case conditions, the news outlet said.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

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Asia

ADB Commits $70 Billion Investment in Asia Through 20235 to Boost Energy, Digital Infrastructure

The Asian Development Bank will inject $70 billion through 2035 to expand energy and digital infrastructure across the Asia-Pacific, with a focus on cross-border electricity trade and broader internet access.In the recent report on Monday, ADB President Masato Kanda said stronger regional connectivity will help lower costs and support growth. The bank plans to mobilize $50 billion under its Pan-Asia Power Grid Initiative to link national grids, scale up renewable energy use, and build transmission lines, substations and storage.A further $20 billion will go towards the Asia-Pacific Digital Highway, funding fibre networks, data centres and other digital systems. By 2035, the projects aim to connect 200 million people to power, widen broadband access, and generate jobs across the region, the report said.

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Asia

Middle East War Poses Greatest Credit Risk for Asia-Pacific's Financial Institutions, S&P Says

The Middle East war's spillover effects serve as the largest credit risk for Asia-Pacific financial institutions, S&P Global Ratings said in a Thursday release.The region's banks are not directly exposed to the Middle East, while indirect exposure is manageable, S&P Asia-Pacific sector lead for financial institutions Gavin Gunning said.Lenders also have ample buffers to absorb linked constraints at current rating levels under a scenario of a deal that will open the Strait of Hormuz by the end of May, Gunning said.However, a downside scenario of a prolonged conflict could cause a 25% rise in credit losses for banks, S&P said.This scenario would mean larger increases in credit losses to total loans in Vietnam, Indonesia, and India, the rating agency said.China will account for the largest share in the total forecast credit losses at about $130 billion.Other countries' banking systems will be stronger at current rating levels, given their buffers, S&P said.Nonbank fund finance will remain a talking point, albeit being more muted, especially for US funds amid uncertainties in the software sector, the rating agency said.Al is also a major concern given the diverging impact it has on the ratings of the region's financial institutions in the coming years, according to S&P.

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