Overall
Private sector credit (PSCE) fell by N$337.6 million or 0.3% m/m in March, bringing the cumulative credit outstanding to N$105.3 billion. On a year-on-year basis, private sector credit grew by 1.55% in March, compared to the 1.76% y/y growth recorded in February. On a rolling 12-month basis, N$1.61 billion worth of credit was extended to the private sector. Of this cumulative issuance, individuals took up credit worth N$1.52 billion, while N$544.5 billion was issued to corporates. The non-resident private sector decreased its borrowings by N$455.5 million.
Credit Extension to Individuals
Credit extended to individuals increased by 2.57% y/y in March, on par with February’s increase of 2.58% y/y. On a monthly basis, household credit grew by 0.4% following the increase of 0.6% m/m recorded in February. Mortgage demand by individuals remained relatively strong, increasing by 0.5% m/m and 4.4% y/y. Instalment credit remained depressed, increasing by only 0.2% m/m, but contracting by 3.5% y/y. Overdraft facilities extended to individuals have increased by 0.9% m/m and 1.5% y/y.
Credit Extension to Corporates
Credit extension to corporates contracted for a second consecutive month, declining by 1.1% m/m, following the 0.6% m/m contraction recorded in February. On an annual basis, however, credit extension to corporates recorded low growth of 1.3% y/y in March, compared to the 1.6% y/y growth registered in February. All segments contracted on a monthly basis. Mortgage loans to corporates contracted by 0.1% m/m, other loans and advances (OLA) fell 0.4% and overdrafts declined 3.0% m/m. On a year-on-year basis, mortgage loans contracted 3.6%, while OLA and overdrafts increased 0.6% and 13.0% respectively.
Banking Sector Liquidity
The overall liquidity position of commercial banks improved during February, increasing by N$1.12 billion to reach an average of N$2.60 billion. According to the BoN, liquidity spikes are generally observed in March, as budget execution protocols are accelerated before the close of the fiscal year. Additional inflows of funds were observed at the end of March as pension funds repatriated assets to comply with domestic asset requirements, according to the BoN. The outstanding balance of repo’s varied quite a lot during the month, fluctuating between N$20.1 million and N$868.1 million, before falling to zero at month-end.
Reserves and Money Supply
As per the BoN’s latest money statistics release, broad money supply rose by N$11.1 billion or 9.5% y/y in March. Foreign reserve balances rose by N$2.32 billion to N$34.7 billion in March. The BoN ascribed the increase to the net purchases of foreign currency by the central bank.
Outlook
Overall, PSCE growth remains subdued, decreasing by N$337.6 million in March, causing monthly growth to revert into negative territory for the first time since September 2020. The rolling 12-month private sector credit issuance is down 71.7% from the N$5.68 billion cumulative issuance as at the end of March 2020, with individuals taking up most (94.5%) of the credit extended over the past 12 months.
The low credit appetite reflects the lack of confidence in the Namibian economy, with businesses continuing to delever their balance sheets and banks being more prudent with lending out money. We expect interest rates to remain at their current, historically low, levels. This should continue to provide overindebted consumers and corporates with relief but is unlikely to drive PSCE growth. The dull PSCE statistics reflects the nation’s poor recent economic performance of late, as it reflects both lower consumption spending as well as lower investments by corporates, which are two vital components of GDP. There are very few catalysts for economic growth at present, and as a result we do not expect to see a recovery in credit extension in the short term.