Singapore bank loans grew 3.3% in February
However, consumer loans grew at the slowest pace since at least 2005.
Singapore bank loans picked up pace after growing 3.3% YoY and 0.2% MoM in February from 3.2% in the previous month as gains from the corporate segment offset weakening activities in the consumer front, according to a report from OCBC Bank.
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The headline loan growth figure represents the fastest pace of expansion since November 2018 when systemwide loans grew 2.8% and the highest since October when loan growth hit 3.4%.
In a breakdown, business loans rose 5.2% YoY and 0.4% MoM in February from 4.8% in the previous month. Although loans to the general commerce fell to 7.7% in February and loans to the building and construction sector slowed to 12.7%, loans to financial institutions hit a five-month high of 3.3%.
"Under Budget 2019, the government had earlier announced that it will increase the accessibility of loan financing for firms by taking up to 70% of the risk (up from 50%) for firms, and this may provide some support for business bank loans going forward," analyst Selena Ling said in a report.
On the consumer front, however, the picture looks much dimmer as loan growth ground to a halt at 0.5% in February from -0.2% MoM the previous month, which represents the slowest pace of expansion since at least 2005. The figure is even lower than the 1.4% growth seen in May 2006 or the cycle low before the Global Financial Crisis.
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Housing and bridging loans eased to 1.2% in February from 1.6% and the private housing market is likely to remain subdued following property cooling measures and expectations of higher rates.
"Our full year 2019 bank loans growth forecast is 1.6% yoy, which suggests there is downside risk of slower bank loans momentum for the months ahead. This will likely be a moderation from the average 4.7% yoy pace seen in 2018 and could potentially mark the weakest year for bank loans growth since the -0.7% yoy decline in 2016," added Ling.