Local Banks Recorded Excess Capital Buffers Of RM133.3 Billion In August: BNM

The banking system recorded an excess capital buffer of RM133.3 billion in August 2023, Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) said.

In its August 2023 monthly highlights, the central bank said the capital position of Malaysian banks remained strong in their ability to withstand potential stress and provide credit to support economic activities.

BNM said the banking system’s resilience continues to be underpinned by sound asset quality, with overall gross loan ratio remaining largely unchanged at 1.8% while net impaired loan ratio stood at 1.1%.

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“Loan loss coverage ratio (including regulatory reserves) remains at a prudent level of 115.0 per cent of impaired loans, with total provisions accounting for 1.6 per cent of total loans,” it said.

In August, BNM said ongoing concerns surrounding the Chinese economic slowdown weighed on global financial markets.

“The People’s Bank of China announced an unexpected round of monetary policy easing. Meanwhile, US Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell reaffirmed at the Jackson Hole Symposium that US monetary conditions would need to remain tight for longer.

“As a result, the ringgit depreciated against the US dollar by 2.1% while the FBM KLCI declined by 0.5%. 10-year Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) yields remain unchanged in August,” it said.

BNM said credit to the private non-financial sector grew by 3.8% at the end of August from 3.8% in July 2023, supported by higher growth in outstanding loans, the central bank said.

“For businesses, while outstanding corporate bonds grew at a slower pace of 4.4% (July 2023: 5.2%), outstanding loan growth increased to 0.7%.

“This mainly reflected an improvement in the non-small and medium enterprises (SME) segment for both working capital and investment loans,” it said.

Of note, BNM said growth in outstanding loans to small and medium enterprises remained largely forthcoming at 6.2% in August as compared to 6.7% in the previous month.

“Growth in outstanding household loans was sustained at 5.3%, supported by higher growth across most loan purposes. Household loan growth continued to be driven by loans for the purchase of houses and cars, which grew by 7.3% and 8.7%, respectively,” it said.

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