Fitch Affirms CIC Receivables Master Trust at 'A-'; Outlook Stable
CIC Receivables Master Trust is backed by future flows due from Visa International Service Association (Visa) and MasterCard International Incorporated (MasterCard) related to international merchant vouchers originating in Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua.
Fitch's ratings address timely payment of interest and principal on a quarterly basis.
KEY RATING DRIVERS
Strength of the Originator: On April 28, 2016, Fitch placed CIC's ratings on Rating Watch Negative following the placement of the ratings assigned to its parent, Banco de Bogota (Bogota) on Rating Watch Negative. The 'BBB+' rating assigned to CIC reflects the support it would receive from Bogota and the strength of CIC's financial franchises in the region. The group is the regional leader in the credit card acquiring and issuing businesses, with strong operating franchises in Costa Rica and other Central American countries. Fitch assigns CIC a going concern assessment score of 'GC2'.
Dominant and Growing Franchise: CIC boasts a market leading and profitable regional credit card business that drives group banking activities. CIC's regional credit card issuing and acquiring volumes each grew 14% CAGR from 2010 to 2015. Robust program flows supported an average quarterly debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) of approximately 13.3x during the last four quarterly payment periods. DSCRs consider total quarterly receivables and the maximum quarterly debt service over the life of the program.
Level of Future Flow Debt: Combined debt under both merchant voucher future programs represents approximately 6.1% of CIC's total liabilities and 37.2% of long-term funding. When also considering Banco BAC San Jose's DPR future flow program, these ratios are approximately 7.8% and 47.4%, respectively. Fitch considers this level of future flow debt commensurate to the current ratings assigned to the transaction.
Low Sovereign/Diversion Risks: The structure mitigates certain sovereign risks by collecting cash flows offshore until collection of periodic debt service. Fitch believes diversion risk is mitigated by the acknowledgment and consent agreements obligating Visa and MasterCard to make payments into a collection account controlled by the trustee.
RATING SENSITIVITIES
The transaction ratings could be sensitive to significant changes in the credit quality of CIC and its parent, Bogota, the credit quality of CIC's underlying subsidiaries, and to the credit quality of Visa and MC. While the transaction is sensitive to the ratings of CIC, its parent Bogota, and CIC's underlying subsidiaries, a one-notch downgrade of these entities would not automatically result in a downgrade of the future flow ratings. A decrease in program flows that results in reduced debt service coverage levels could also result in rating downgrades. Transaction ratings may also be sensitive to the ratings of the relevant sovereign environments.
Fitch has affirmed the following ratings:
CIC Receivables Master Trust
--Series 2002-A certificates at 'A-', Outlook Stable;
--Series 2014-A notes at 'A-', Outlook Stable.
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