Manila Bulletin

PH external debt drops to $72.2 billion

-

The Philippine­s’ external debt slightly declined to $72.2 billion as of end-June this year, or down by 0.4 percent from same time last year of $72.5 billion due to some loan repayments and foreign exchange (FX) adjustment­s, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said Friday.

BSP Governor Nestor A. Espenilla Jr., in a statement, said the external debt “has continued to decline in recent years (from $77.7 billion as of end-2014 to $72.2 billion in end-June 2018) which may be attributed to prudent debt management and Philippine corporate borrowers' deleveragi­ng from foreign borrowings in order to minimize FX risk.”

About 61.5 percent of the country’s debt stocks are in US dollar. Another 12.9 percent are denominate­d in Japanese yen. The US dollar-denominate­d multicurre­ncy loans from the World Bank and Asian Developmen­t Bank, in the meantime, account for 14.6 percent share to total, while the remaining 11 percent of external debt are denominate­d in 17 other currencies, including in the local currency, Euro and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s special drawing right or SDR.

The BSP pointed to several offsetting factors why the external debt fell by $294 million year-on-year, such as a net principal repayments amounting to $2.4 billion during the first-half. These are mostly the private sector's short-term bank liabilitie­s.

The decline in outstandin­g debt was also due to prior periods' adjustment­s which amounted to $1.8 billion due to late reporting, as well as the transfer of Philippine debt papers amounting to $419 million from residents to nonresiden­ts.

The country’s external debt remains manageable in the second quarter. It dropped more significan­tly by 1.4 percent compared to the end-March of $73.2 billion, or by 997 million.

In the second quarter, the BSP said the decline in debt stock was mainly because of the following: negative FX revaluatio­n adjustment­s amounting to $720 million as the US dollar strengthen­ed against third currencies, particular­ly the Japanese yen ($454 million); the decrease in non-resident investment­s by $309 million in Philippine debt papers; and net prin-

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines