Declining credit growth is bad news for banks, as it means
their main method of revenue, which is interest earnings on the capital they
lend out, is shrinking.
Zaid Bakht, a director of Sonali Bank, said loan
disbursement is on a declining trend due to the ongoing political situation.
“The bank officials are also more cautious in disbursing loans following the
recent financial scams.”
If the increasing deposit cannot be invested, it may hamper
the bank’s profitability, he said.
The reason for the deposit growth is the high public
confidence, despite the state-owned banks’ deteriorating financial health, the
World Bank said. The WB team estimated the banks’ total capital shortfall to be
in the order of Tk 17,200 crore.
“It seems that these banks continue to enjoy the confidence
of the general public and of most of the financial institutions within and outside
the country,” it said in the draft aide memoire submitted to the government
last month.
Bakht, also the research director of Bangladesh Institute of
Development Studies, said although irregularities took place in the state banks
in recent times, the general people still believe that depositing money in them
is safe and their savings will remain protected.
“The general people prefer to deposit in the state-owned
banks even if the rate of interest is lower than the private banks’.”
Another reason for the state-owned banks’ mounting deposits,
says Zahid Hossain, lead economist of the WB’s Dhaka office, is their wide
reach, particularly in rural areas.
“The savings of rural people are on the rise due to the
increase in remittance inflow—and they deposit them in the state-owned banks.”
With the looming possibility of profitability losses, the
four banks’ top management are asking their branches to increase their loan
disbursement,
with credit disbursement targets on way as well, officials
said.
“Otherwise, we will have to face losses,” said a high
official of Sonali Bank, adding that the board did not receive any “term
lending” proposal in the last 10 months.
But Hossain says pressuring the branch level management
would not be wise as they may not scrutinise the loan proposals appropriately.
“The state-owned banks will have to operate on a commercial
approach basis.”
Meanwhile, the WB noted that in the backdrop of fall in
investments and decrease in demand for loans,
the state-owned banks have once again become net lenders of
liquidity in the interbank call money market. And, according to central bank
statistics, the state-owned banks are, in fact, the major lenders in the call
money market.
Three state-owned banks lent around Tk 3,000 crore on
September 12 in the call money market, of which Sonali Bank alone lent Tk 1,500
crore.
News Source:The Daily Star Bangladesh
Dated:18-Sep-2013
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