Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH FIRMS’ DOLLAR LOANS STILL RISING

- By Daxim L. Lucas @daxINQ

Philippine firms continued to borrow in dollars during the first quarter of the year, with the amount of new loans exceeding repayments despite the volatile exchange rate, the central bank said on Friday.

In a statement, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said loans granted by banks’ foreign currency deposit units (FCDU) rose by 6.4 percent to $6.3 billion at the end of March 2018, up by $685 million from the end-December 2017 level of $15.4 billion.

BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said the maturity mix of the loan portfolio remained biased towards medium- to long-term debt or those payable over a term of more than one year, which represente­d 74.2 percent of total.

The bulk of outstandin­g loans went to the towing, tanker, trucking and forwarding sector (24.1 percent); merchandis­e and service exporters (20.1 percent); public utility firms (11.4 percent); and producers/manufactur­ers, including oil companies (6.7 percent).

Gross disburseme­nts during the reference quarter reached $15.6 billion, 1.7 percent lower than the previous quarter’s figure.

Loan repayments were likewise lower by 5.5 percent but still lower than disburseme­nts, resulting in overall net disburseme­nts of $972 million.

FCDUdeposi­t liabilitie­s likewise decreased by $796 million to $38.4 billion from last quarter’s $39.2 billion level, with the bulk (96.8 percent) continuing to be held by residents.

The overall loan-to-deposit ratio improved to 42.6 percent from 39.2 percent a quarter ago.

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