
SBP Stability Review'24: banks borrow more; deposit shrinks by over Rs1 trillion
Pakistan banks lost momentum on mobilising deposit amid shift in their focus to raise advance-to-deposit (ADR) ratios in the year ended December 31, 2024, the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said in its Financial Stability Review – 2024 published on Thursday.
This resulted into their increased reliance on borrowings to fund the assets growth in the year, the report said.
The Stability Review showed the performance and risk assessment of various segments of the financial sector including banks, microfinance banks (MFBs), development finance institutions (DFIs), non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs), insurance, financial markets and financial market infrastructures (FMIs).
It also assessed the financial soundness of non-financial corporate sector, a major private sector user of bank credit.
Pakistan receives record $4.1bn in remittances in March, says SBP governor
The central bank data suggested that banks deposit stood at Rs30.28 trillion at the end of December 2024 after hitting Rs31.34 trillion in September 2024, showing a drop of Rs1.06 trillion, or 3.5%, in the last three-month of the year under review.
'Deposit mobilisation also lost momentum as banks strived to raise their ADR ratios. Accordingly, the sector's reliance on borrowings increased to fund the assets growth,' the central bank said.
'Banks' earnings remained steady on the back of increased volume of earning assets as the fall in interest rates translated into deceleration in earnings' growth.'
Banks strived to achieve the government's then mandatory target of increasing their advances in the last quarter of the year 2024, it was learnt.
To achieve the target, banks had to increase their advances (credit to private sector) to 50% of their respective deposits to avoid additional taxes of up to 15%.
For that, banks apparently avoided accepting fresh deposits and increased their lending to the corporate sector in the year.
It may be noted that the government later abolished ADR-based tax and increased corporate income tax rate by 5% to 44% for banks in late December 2024.
Accordingly, the deposits have peaked to a new high at Rs31.63 trillion in March 2025, as per SBP data.
'In order to enhance depositor trust and augment safety nets, the deposit protection amount has been increased to Rs1 million from Rs0.5 million,' the Stability Review report said.
The report further said Raast – the central bank's instant payment system - maintained its growth momentum with its outreach reaching around 40 million users and processing almost 800 million transactions during calendar year 2024.
Moreover, credit risk profile of the banking sector manifested no serious concerns due to adequate provisioning coverage of non-performing loans, the report said.
New design banknotes: Rs3.4bn paper machine upgrade project awarded to German firm
It said the adoption of the new accounting standards IFRS-9 (International Financial Reporting Standard) was expected to further enhance the risk management practices of banks and augment their financial cushions to withstand delinquencies in loan portfolio.
Solvency indicators such as capital adequacy ratio (CAR) of the banking sector improved further to 20.6% and remained well above the global standard as well as domestic minimum regulatory requirements, according to the SBP review.
The report said macroeconomic conditions improved considerably during CY24, as reflected by receding inflationary pressures and consequent significant monetary easing, fiscal consolidation, stable rupee-dollar parity, pick-up in economic activity, and improved external account balance.
In that backdrop, financial sector—growing by a decent pace of 17.8% —maintained its operational and financial resilience during CY24.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
19 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Jul-Mar: Pakistan govt borrowing slumps 69%
KARACHI: The government sector borrowing for budgetary support declined sharply, ie, 69 percent or Rs 2.9 trillion during the nine months of this fiscal year (FY25). According to Economic Survey of Pakistan, issued on Monday, during July-March FY 2025, the government sector borrowing for budgetary support decreased to Rs 1.320 trillion compared to Rs 4.220 trillion during the same period last year (FY24), showing a notable declined of Rs 2.9 trillion. During the period, the government retired Rs 287.4 billion to the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) against a retirement of Rs 654.7 billion last year. Similarly, the government borrowed Rs 1.608 trillion from scheduled banks, significantly less than Rs 4.874 trillion in the same period last year. Therefore, net government sector borrowing decreased from Rs 3.856 trillion in July-March FY 2024 to Rs 1.019 trillion in same period of FY25. Pakistan debt stock reaches all-time high of Rs75trn During the period under review, low government borrowing reflects fiscal consolidation as fiscal deficit remained 2.4 percent of GDP during July March FY 2025 compared to 3.7 percent the same period last year. On the other side, credit to private sector rose markedly to Rs 767.6 billion during July to March of FY25, a substantial increase from Rs 265.2 billion in the same period last year. Within the private sector credit, loans to businesses observed expansion of Rs 830.9 billion compared borrowing of Rs 307.8 billion during same period last year. According to Economic Survey, this expansion was primarily driven by the manufacturing sector, which accounted for Rs 573.1 billion (increase of Rs 278.7 billion). Across sectors, credit to food sector declined, whereas the textile sector witnessed a sharp surge in borrowing, reaching Rs 255.1 billion compared to Rs 26.7 billion in the previous year. Other sectors also exhibited strong credit growth: construction sector credit rose to Rs 19.9 billion (from Rs 4.2 billion), accommodation and food services jumped to Rs 40.4 billion (from Rs 2.6 billion), and the information and communication sector rebounded significantly with a credit inflow of Rs 103.5 billion from a net retirement of Rs 3.0 billion. The disaggregated data shows that the increase in credit to private sector was largely concentrated in working capital loans, which rose to Rs 611.8 billion July-March FY 2025 from Rs 275.7 billion last year. Fixed investment loans also picked up significantly, owing to higher investment in petroleum, sugar and fertilizer. Fixed investment loans surged to Rs 236.7 billion during the period under review, up from Rs 47.2 billion last year. The revival in credit appetite is largely attributed to a more accommodative monetary policy stance, which lowered borrowing costs. Additionally, the relaxation of import restrictions on raw materials and capital goods, coupled with an improved outlook for business activity, supported the expansion in investment and operational financing. During July–March FY 2025, commodity financing recorded a net retirement of Rs 303.4 billion, slightly lower than Rs 362 billion observed in the same period last year. This was mainly contributed by Wheat financing, with a net retirement of Rs 326.9 billion, lower than Rs 427.7 billion recorded during the same period last year. The continued contraction in wheat financing reflects a significant policy shift, as the federal government has stepped back from regulating wheat prices and the Pakistan Agricultural Storage & Services Corporation (Passco) has not participated in wheat procurement during this period. This policy realignment contributed to reduced financing needs within the wheat supply chain. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Business Recorder
19 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Pakistan economy gets macroeconomic stability
KARACHI: Pakistan's economy has achieved macroeconomic stability in FY25, recovering from the challenges emerged in FY23, and restoring economic confidence alongside favourable economic outlook. However, continued reforms and external support is crucial to maintain this recovery. According to Pakistan Economic Survey for the fiscal year 2025 (FY25) released on Monday, Pakistan has emerged from the economic turbulence of FY23, driven by easing inflation, improved external balance and fiscal discipline. 'Improved macroeconomic indicators including easing inflationary pressures, a stronger external account position along with fiscal consolidation have contributed to renewed economic confidence and a more favourable economic outlook.' Inflation is expected to remain within the medium-term target range of 5-7 percent in coming years, reinforcing the effectiveness of recent policy measures about anchoring expectations and supporting recovery. Fitch upgrades Pakistan's rating: macroeconomic stabilisation acknowledged However, the survey noted that nonetheless, the sustainability of this recovery hinges on the continued implementation of sound, well-coordinated economic policies. Government is cognisant of the fact that ensuring price stability and fostering broad based growth will require a conducive business environment for investment and job creation, timely and adequate external inflows to meet financing needs, and resilience in the external sector, it added. According to Economic Survey, the domestic economic recovery which started in FY 2024 continued in FY25, mainly due to the government's proactive measures tailored to address economic challenges and foster a conducive environment for sustained growth. Consequently, inflation decreased significantly, foreign exchange reserves increased, and the exchange rate stabilised. The positive momentum has been supported by sound macroeconomic management, with improved fiscal & external balance and effective measures to control inflation. Pakistan's monetary policy during July-May FY25 marked a cautious pivot toward easing, amid global and domestic evolving environment. A notable disinflationary trend persisted from the beginning of the current fiscal year, driven by declining food and energy prices, improved domestic supply chains, and a relatively stable exchange rate. Inflation reached an all-time low of 0.3 percent in April, and with inflation easing alongside steadier domestic and external conditions, allowing State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) to adopt an accommodative policy stance. With a sharper-than-anticipated decline in headline inflation driven by energy tariff adjustments, softening food prices, and a favourable base effect, the MPC resumed easing in May 2024 with a further 100 basis point cut. This brought the total reduction to 950 basis points for FY25 (Jul-May) and 1100 basis points since the start of the easing cycle in June 2024. The banking sector of Pakistan also exhibited a steady performance that is reflected in the key financial soundness indicators related to capital adequacy, earnings, and asset quality. Assets base of the sector grew by 15.8 percent YoY in CY2024 to reach Rs 53.7 trillion by end December-2024. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Business Recorder
a day ago
- Business Recorder
Public debt recorded at Rs76,007bn by end-March
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's total public debt was recorded at Rs 76,007 billion by end-March 2025, registering an increase of Rs 4,761 billion (6.7 percent) during first nine months of current fiscal year, as it was Rs 71,246 billion on June 30, 2024, the Economic Survey 2024-25 noted. External public debt was recorded at $87.4 billion by end-March 2025, revealing an increase of around $883 million during the first nine months of the current fiscal year compared to an increase of $2.6 billion during the same period of the last fiscal year, however it does not contain liabilities of foreign exchange, public sector enterprises (PSEs), banks and private sector. According to the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) data, the country's external debt and liabilities stood at $130.310 billion by end-March 2025, which contains, government external debt, short term, from International Monetary Fund (IMF) as well as liabilities of foreign exchange, public sector enterprises, banks and private sector. Pakistan govt's debt stock soars to Rs73.6trn by March-end Pakistan's domestic debt stood at Rs 51.5 trillion by end-March fiscal year 2025, reflecting an increase of Rs 4.8 trillion during the first nine months of the fiscal year, from Rs 47.160 trillion by end-June 2024. The increase of Rs 4761 billion in public debt include Rs (2415) billion of federal primary deficit, Rs 6,439 billion interest on debt, Rs 738 billion on other (Exchange Rate / Cash Balances / Accounting impact). Government external debt accounts for the majority, amounting to $79,131 million, while debt from the IMF stands at $8,277 million. The IMF debt further consists of the federal government debt ($3,878 million) and the central bank debt ($4,399 million). The government's external debt is predominantly long-term in nature, with $78,181 million long-term debt (greater than one year) and $950 million as short-term debt (less than one year). Among long-term external debt sources, multilateral loans form the largest portion, totaling $40,468 million, constituting around 51.8 percent of the long-term external debt. These loans are provided by development partners like the World Bank and Asian Development Bank and are concessional in nature, with lower interest rates and extended repayment periods. The Paris Club debt amounts to $5,943 million, representing approximately 7.6 percent of Pakistan's long-term external public debt. Bilateral loans from non-Paris Club countries amount to $17,860 million (22.8 percent of longterm debt). Outstanding loans from foreign commercial banks amount to $5,850 million constituting around 7.5 percent of long-term debt. These loans are short-to-medium term (i.e., 1-3 years) with market-based interest rates. Short-term debt, which poses refinancing risk, is significantly lower. Multilateral short-term loans amount to $426 million, while local currency securities (T-bills) add another $524 million. In the first nine months of the fiscal year 2025, the total inflows from external debt disbursements amounted to $5,066 million. Of this, multilateral sources contributed the largest ($2,797), followed by commercial/other ($2,011), and bilateral sources ($258 million). There were no bond issuances during this period. Repayments totaled $5,636 million, with multilateral creditors receiving the largest portion ($2,828 million), followed by bilateral creditors ($1,565 million), and commercial/other sources ($1,243 million). Interest payments amounted to $2,660 million, with the bulk of these payments directed towards multilateral creditors ($1,315 million). Copyright Business Recorder, 2025