FROM ONE ANGLE Kazakhstans banking sector looks as blighted as the old atom bomb testing sites in the north of the country. In real estate, which makes up the collateral for most of the loans of virtually all Kazakh banks, prices have fallen by around 56% since 2007. But property sales are still as scarce as trees in the steppe.
Non-performing loans make up at least a third of the sectors balance sheet, and there could be much worse to come.
Politician and businessman Mukhtar Ablyazov faces accusations of fraud from BTA, which in 2008, under his chairmanship, became the biggest bank in Kazakhstan. Provisioning ratios for bad assets amount to more than 70% of BTAs loan portfolios, implying an unrealized loss of an equivalent of just over $11 billion. BTA, which is now owned by Kazakhstans sovereign wealth fund Samruk-Kazyna, is pursuing a hunt to...