The Phnom Penh Post

Consumer credit hits $7B in Q2

- Thou Vireak

THE total outstandin­g balance of consumer credit in Cambodia continued to steadily increase, reaching $7.16 billion by the end of June – a 6.8 per cent increase from the first quarter – according to a Credit Bureau Cambodia (CBC) report released last week.

The number of consumer loan accounts increased by 5.03 per cent quarter-on-quarter, bringing the total number of accounts to 1.19 million, equal to 37.67 per cent of total individual accounts in the

market, said the report.

As of June, non-performing loans after 30 days (NPL 30) fell to 1.19 per cent from 1.24 per cent at the end of March, it said.

The $7.16 billion in outstandin­g consumer credit accounted for roughly 30.22 per cent of the total outstandin­g balance of individual loans in the market.

However, the report said, the number of customers applying for consumer credit in its three forms – personal finance, credit cards and mortgages – all dropped 19.29 per cent.

The report said the biggest drop was in mortgage applicatio­ns, which fell by 36 per cent quarter-on-quarter, with the coastal regions seeing the sharpest drop at 49 per cent.

Applicatio­ns for credit cards fell by nine per cent and personal finance applicatio­ns shrank 18 per cent, it said.

CBC CEO Oeur Sothearoat­h said this quarter was not entirely different from previous years, in which consumer credit applicatio­ns consistent­ly dropped in the second quarter.

“However, compared to the same period in 2018, the number of applicatio­ns increased by 9.03 per cent this quarter,” he said.

Sothearoat­h said the number of consumer credit accounts has grown steadily since last year at between five and seven per cent each quarter, with the outstandin­g balance increasing at between six and eight per cent.

Acleda Bank Plc president and CEO In Channy attributed the decline in the number of consumer credit applicatio­ns during the second quarter to a decline in consumer spending.

“The number of consumer credit applicatio­ns may have fallen, but the balance has grown largely,” he said.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? An Acleda Bank Plc employee hands money to a customer.
HENG CHIVOAN An Acleda Bank Plc employee hands money to a customer.

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