Saturday Star

QUICK READ Financial Sector

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The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) said this week that the domestic financial sector remained vulnerable to internatio­nal developmen­ts such as global stagflatio­n and the spillover effects of the Russia-ukraine war. However, the financial system continued to be resilient under heightened volatility and challengin­g global and domestic conditions, and this resilience was expected to be sustained over the forecast period. Macro-prudential specialist Dr Herco Steyn said global stagflatio­n could put pressure on some sectors of the financial system. However, prudential­ly regulated domestic financial institutio­ns remained resilient, partly owing to their ability to maintain adequate capital buffers to absorb the impact of shocks.

The Eighty20/xds Credit Stress Report for the first quarter 2022, released this week, notes that although the number of creditacti­ve individual­s continues to rise, it is still below 2020 levels. The value of loans also rose despite the total number of loans dropping by more than a quarter million since December. For the first time in more than two years, the total balance of loans that are 30-plus days in arrears has decreased quarter-on-quarter, by 3.4%. However, the number of loans in arrears increased by 0.5%. Loans in arrears now make up 38.7% of open loans, or 8.8% of loan value. Loans more than nine months in arrears (which make up half of all loans in arrears) increased for the fourth quarter in a row, rising by

0.4% quarter-on-quarter (1.5% yearon-year).

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