MFIs loan increased 5.46 percent Q3
Cambodian Microfinance Association (CMA) released its figures that during the third quarter of this year, Cambodia’s microfinance institutions (MFIs), which included 21 MFIs and small loans from ACLEDA Bank, increased 5.46 percent to 448.1 million, following a 2.7 percent drop in outstanding loans in the second quarter.
According to CMA’s data, non-performing loans (NPLs) declined 1.9 percent over the period to 1.48 percent, or US$8.7 million.
“We have seen the economic situation begin to recover, and people have begun to expand their businesses, so they need capital again,” Hout Ieng Tong, CMA President, was quoted by the Post as saying.
“The slash of interest rates of between 0.2 and 0.5 percentage points by MFIs in early September was also a factor,” said he. He added that interest rates are currently between 1.5 and 2.8 percent per month at MFIs.
During this period, the total loans increased but the number of borrowers was down 14.7 percent to 883,087 down from more than 1 million three months earlier, according to the report.
The report show that CLEDA bank’s outstanding portfolio of small loans was up 5.49 percent to US$172.2 million, while the drop of its NPL ration was from 1.63 percent in 2nd quarter to zero at the end of the September of 2009.
