Thursday, April 24, 2025

Banks’ FCDU lending decreases by $340M

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Outstanding loans granted by Foreign Currency Deposit Units (FCDU) of banks stood at $15.2 billion as of end-December 2023, a decrease of US$340 million or by 2.2 percent from the end-September 2023 level of $15.5 billion as principal repayments exceeded disbursements amidst elevated interest rates for both short-term and medium-to long-term (MLT) loans.

Year-on-year, outstanding FCDU loans decreased by about $621 million or by 3.9 percent from the end-December 2022 level of $15.8 billion.

As of end-December 2023, the maturity profile of the FCDU loan portfolio remained predominantly MLT, which comprised 78.6 percent of total, slightly higher than 77.6 percent from the previous quarter.

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FCDU loans granted to residents stood at $9.2 billion or 60.6 percent of total outstanding FCDU loans, of which majority went to the following sector/industries: power generation companies ($2.3 billion or 25.0 percent); merchandise and service exporters ($2.3 billion or 25.0 percent); and towing, tanker, trucking, forwarding, personal and other industries ($1.2 billion or 12.8 percent).

Gross disbursements in the fourth quarter of 2023 reached $18.0 billion higher by 5.4 percent than the previous quarter’s $17.1 billion mainly due to the increase in funding requirements of a foreign bank branch affiliate. Similarly, loan repayments in the reference quarter of $18.4 billion were 8.4 percent higher than previous quarter’s $17.0 billion. These resulted in overall net repayment.

FCDU deposit liabilities reached an all-time high of $54.4 billion as of end-December 2023, higher by about $2.6 billion from the end-September 2023 level of $51.8 billion.

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