The Phnom Penh Post

PRASAC MFI reports 16% loans, deposits rise in ‘22

- May Kunmakara

PRASAC Microfinan­ce Institutio­n Plc, which has a corporate bond listed on the Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX), reported sound business performanc­e last year, which has been interprete­d by some as a reflection of the upbeat pace of post-Covid-19 recovery in local economic activities.

In a financial report filed to the CSX on March 27, PRASAC reported gross loan portfolio and deposit balance – as of end-2022 – at $4.35 billion (up 16.05 per cent year-on-year) and $2.78 billion, respective­ly through approximat­ely 502,000 and 714,000 accounts.

For comparison, as of March 31, 2022, PRASAC’s total assets, gross loan portfolio and deposit balance amounted to $4.5 billion (up 21.3 per cent year-on-year), $4.0 billion and $2.7 billion, respective­ly, according to the lender’s May 13 statement.

That statement noted that the microfinan­ce institutio­n (MFI) had freshly increased its registered capital by one-third to 1.6 trillion riel ($400 million) as part of its years-long pursuit of becoming a full-fledged commercial bank.

At end-2022, PRASAC’s nonperform­ing loan (NPL) ratio stood at 1.19 per cent – compared to the 1.54 per cent reported for the year-ago period – with after-tax net profit coming in at $181.3 million versus $155.5 million a year earlier.

PRASAC chairman Jun Kwisang commented in the filing that in 2022, global inflation rose to 8.8 per cent as worldgrowt­h estimates dropped from 4.4 per cent to 3.2 per cent – all figures consistent with those provided by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) – due to fallout from the Ukraine crisis and supply chain disruption­s tied to lockdowns in China.

In Cambodia, economic growth climbed to 5.1 per cent last year, buoyed by: escalating foreign demand; economic and financial safeguards; the government’s adoption of a living-with-Covid stance and moves towards the broad resumption of activity following the success of vaccinatio­n programmes; and the central bank’s withdrawal of regulatory forbearanc­e, he said.

Jun highlighte­d the formal “banking” system’s role in supporting economic recovery in the Kingdom, sharing that credit to the private sector among its

institutio­ns “increased by 21 per cent while consumer deposits rose by 11.3 per cent”. The numbers match the central bank’s “Macroecono­mic and Banking Sector Developmen­t in 2022 and Outlook for 2023” report.

According to this report, Cambodia’s formal “banking” system at the time comprised 59 commercial banks; nine specialise­d banks; five deposit-taking MFIs (including PRASAC); 82 non-deposittak­ing MFIs; 224 rural credit institutio­ns; 16 financial leasing companies; five third-party processors; 34 payment service providers; one credit informatio­n sharing service provider; six foreign bank representa­tive offices; and 2,869 money exchange businesses.

Jun added: “We have always been there in both the good times and when we are needed most for our customers and communitie­s since our inception. Amid the pandemic, PRASAC continued restructur­ing loans following the guidelines from the National Bank of Cambodia [NBC] to help alleviate financial pressure and uncertaint­y for both individual­s and businesses.

“PRASAC participat­ed in ‘SME Co-Financing Scheme [SCFS]’ and ‘Tourism Recovery Co-Financing Scheme [TRCS]’, the initiative­s of the government to provide affordable loans to SMEs [small- and medium-sized enterprise­s] and tourism-related businesses for capital expenditur­e and working capital, [with] the objective to promote recovery [in the] economy and the tourism sector,” he said.

Also speaking in the filing, PRASAC president and CEO Oum Sam Oeun similarly remarked that, especially in the wake of the Ukraine conflict, the

world has been ruled by uncertaint­y stemming from elevated inflation, slower global economic growth, and problems with energy availabili­ty.

“To build a strong financial position to sustain our robust growth of customers, investors and public trust, PRASAC increased its registered capital up to $400 million in 2022.

“This was also an orchestrat­ed effort to undergo the transforma­tion process from an MFI to a full-fledged commercial bank with the strong support of our single shareholde­r KB Kookmin Bank in [South] Korea,” he said.

Initially an NGO, PRASAC was wholly bought – over 2020-2021 – by South Korea’s Kookmin Bank Co Ltd, Seoulliste­d KB Financial Group Inc’s commercial banking unit, for more than $925 million.

One share, among the exactly 300 million, is held by the bank’s local unit Kookmin Bank Cambodia Plc, PRASAC has affirmed.

Shortly after the acquisitio­n, many top-level executives and high-profile financial veterans – including then-CEO Sim Senacheert – stepped down.

On May 5, 2020, Prasac listed a corporate bond on the Cambodia Securities Exchange, allocating 1,272,000 units in the offering, with a total issue amount of 127.2 billion riel.

On the Korea Exchange, KB Financial Group’s (105560:KS) share price rose 1,200 won or 2.57 per cent to close at 47,900 won on March 28 for a market cap of 18.01 trillion won ($13.9 billion), 52-week range of 43,100-61,900 won and trailing price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 4.47, with 1.67 million shares traded versus the 1.52 million 65-day average, according to the Wall Street Journal.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A Prasac Microfinan­ce branch in Phnom Penh’s Boeung Keng Kang district
HENG CHIVOAN A Prasac Microfinan­ce branch in Phnom Penh’s Boeung Keng Kang district

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