Banks wrote off ¢2.92bn as bad debt as of October 2022

Story By: myjoyonline.com

Banks operating in Ghana wrote off ¢2.92 billion as bad debt in the first 10 months of 2022, the Domestic Money Bank’s Income Statement has revealed.

The bad debt which was 66.8% more than the previous year was as a result of loan losses, depreciation, among others. During the same period in 2021, ¢1.75 billion was written off as bad loans.

According to the Bank of Ghana, the banking industry’s Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) stock increased to ¢11.3 billion in October 2022, from ¢8.4 billion in October 2021. This is partly reflecting the revaluation of the foreign currency NPLs and deterioration in some domestic currency portfolios.

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However, the industry’s asset quality (NPL ratio) improved during the period under review from 16.4% in October 2021 to 14.0% in October 2022.

When adjusted for the fully provisioned loan loss category, the industry’s NPL ratio declined sharply from 6.2% to 3.9%.

The decline in the NPL ratio, according to the Bank of Ghana, was due to higher growth in total loans (57.7% year-on-year growth) relative to the NPL stock (34.2% year-on-year growth) during the review period.

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Services only sector to record increase in NPL

With the exception of the services sector, which recorded an increase in NPL ratio from 8.4% in October 2021 to 8.6% in October 2022, the NPL ratios for all the other sectors declined.

Specifically, the NPL ratio of the commerce and finance sector declined from 23.8% in October 2021 to 15.9% in October 2022, while that of agriculture, forestry and fishing declined from 29.9% to 22.4% during the same comparative period.

Five other sectors also recorded declines in NPL ratios, namely, the mining and quarrying sector (from 8.9% to 4.6%); manufacturing (from 18.0% to 14.6%); electricity, water and gas (from 15.4% to 11.1%); transport, storage and communications (from 11.8% to 11.2%), and; construction (from 35.0% to 31.7%).

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The NPL ratio for the construction sector was the highest at 31.7%, followed by agriculture, forestry and fishing at 22.4%, while the mining and quarrying sector maintained the lowest NPL ratio of 4.6% during the period under review.

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