Business World

Philippine lenders’ earnings up 14% on lending, trading gains

- By Keisha B. Ta-asan and Aaron Michael C. Sy Reporters

THE NET INCOME of the Philippine banking industry rose by 14.4% last year amid higher interest income and trading gains, according to central bank data.

Banks’ net income rose to P354.93 billion from P310.12 billion in 2022, spurred by a 20% year-on-year increase in net interest income to P906.872 billion. Noninteres­t income fell by 15.8% to P218.93 billion from P259.89 billion in 2022.

Michael L. Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., attributed improved profits to demand for loans despite high borrowing costs. The sector also had fewer bad loans, he said in a Viber message.

Outstandin­g loans issued by big banks rose by 7% to P11.701 trillion at end-December. It went up by 2.6% month on month. The December growth rate was unchanged from November, the slowest in three months.

Loan growth slowed for the most part last year amid the central bank’s aggressive rate increases.

The banking industry’s bad loan ratio fell 3.23% in December from 3.41% a month earlier, the lowest in a year, central bank data showed.

Lenders’ gross bad loans stood at P446.99 billion, 12% higher than a year earlier and 1.6% lower than the end-November level. A bank loan is classified as nonperform­ing when debt payments have not been made for 90 days.

“The higher income of banks was also due to higher trading gains and other investment income in view of the hefty gains in the global and local financial markets since November to December 2023,” Mr. Ricafort said.

Banks’ earnings from fees and commission­s went up 12.4% to P138.637 billion from a year ago, while trading income climbed by 38.6% to P22.845 billion. Noninteres­t expenses rose by 13% year on year to P636.15 billion.

Noninteres­t expenses include compensati­on and fringe benefits, taxes and licenses, fees and commission­s, and administra­tive expenses.

The operating income of Philippine banks grew by 11.9% to P1.13 trillion last year. Interest earnings rose by 39.7% to P1.27 trillion, while interest expense more than doubled to P366.254 billion.

The industry’s losses from financial assets slid by 5.8% to P83.465 billion. Provisions for credit losses fell by 12.8% to P91.83 billion, while bad debts written off plunged by 71.9% to P671.083 million.

The local banking industry’s assets increased by 9.1% to P25.147 trillion.

Possible policy rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve this year could lead to more trading gains and investment income for local lenders in the coming months, Mr. Ricafort said. Elevated interest rates in the Philippine­s and wider profit margins could also lead to higher earnings, he added.

The Fed raised rates by 525 basis points (bps) from March 2022 to July 2023, bringing its key interest rate to 5.25%-5.5%.

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