Money Markets

Long-term deposits deny banks room to cut lending rates

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Commercial banks find it challenging to cut lending rates further because they are holding expensive deposits. Photo/LIZ MUTHONI

Commercial banks find it challenging to cut lending rates further because they are holding expensive deposits. Photo/LIZ MUTHONI 

By GEOFFREY IRUNGU  (email the author)
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Posted  Monday, July 19  2010 at  00:00

Commercial banks are tied with expensive long-term deposits and bonds, making it difficult for them to cut lending rates further.

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In 2008 and last year, some big banks signed long-term fixed deposits at about 10 per cent and raised billions through corporate bonds at between 11 and 12 per cent when the economy was gripped with tight liquidity.

The country was at the time facing a scarcity of deposits, prompting banks to pay higher rates of about 10 per cent for up to a decade as they sought funds for onward lending.

But with a build-up of cash and scarcity of investment opportunities, deposits rates are now falling as the short-term government debt market gets saturated, leaving investors with loads of cash to bank.

For instance, the rates for wholesale deposits have dropped to between six and seven per cent in 2010.

The cut in deposit rate has been even deeper in the small savers segment where the rate of return is at below 1.5 per cent from about two per cent last year.

But for banks that had gone heavy in search of long term fixed deposits in 2008 and 2009, they have been left with expensive money since they cannot change terms of the contracts midway.

“There are those who are still paying the higher rates of last year on their deposits,” said Mr Shamaz Savani, the managing director of ABC Bank

“Normally once you sign an agreement for a fixed deposit for a year or more, you have to stick to it, even if interest rates come down in between.”

This position has made it difficult for banks to significantly cut lending rates without hurting profits.

Most banks — save for KCB and Citibank — have lowered their base lending rates by between one and 1.5 per cent, a move that analysts attribute to the expensive whole sale deposits that account for about 40 per cent of the country’s lending book.

Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) Governor Njuguna Ndung’u has been pushing banks to cut their lending further in line with the fall in Treasury bills and bonds.

The 91-day Treasury-bill has dropped from 7.3 per cent to 1.72 per cent over the past year while the long dated bond has dropped from an average of 12 per cent to nine per cent.

This means that banks that raised money from the capital markets for onward lending are holding expensive money.

For instance, CfC Stanbic raised Sh2.4 billion last year through a corporate bond that they will pay a 12.5 per cent return annually for seven years.

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