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Bank of Portugal imposes capital buffer for mortgages at four large banks

FILE PHOTO: A man walks with his dog outside Bank of Portugal in downtown Lisbon

LISBON (Reuters) - The Bank of Portugal has told Millennium bcp, Novo Banco, Banco BPI and the local unit of Spain's Santander, to create a new capital buffer equivalent to 4% of their loan portfolios that are collateralised by home mortgages.

It said in a statement on Wednesday the measure addressing "sectoral systemic risk" would come into effect on Oct. 1, 2024, and be reviewed at least every two years.

"This instrument has a preventative nature and aims to increase the resilience of institutions in the face of a potential future materialisation of systemic risk in the residential real estate market in Portugal," it said.

The central bank said the four banks, which account for 61% of total home loans, were using internal ratings-based approach to calculate risk-weighted assets, which leads to lower evaluations than those of banks using the standard method.

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BPI is owned by Spain's Caixabank and Novo Banco by the U.S. fund Lone Star.

According to central bank data, all lenders in Portugal brought total non-performing loans (NPLs) down to 9.69 billion euros ($10.51 billion), or 3.1% of total credit, in June from the peak of 17.9% in June 2016.

The NPL ratio of loans to individuals was just 2.4% in June, despite rising interest rates and high inflation.

($1 = 0.9217 euros)

(Reporting by Sergio Goncalves; editing by Andrei Khalip)