Balance Sheet and Interest Rates of Monetary Financial Institutions, March 2024
Today, the Bank of Lithuania published the monetary financial institution (MFI) balance sheet and interest rate data for March 2024, which show that:
loans granted by credit institutions to Lithuanian residents increased1 by €410.9 million, or 1.5%, over the month (the annual growth rate2 stood at 4.5%). Loans to Lithuanian non-financial corporations and households went up by €307.1 million and €81.7 million, or 2.9% and 0.6%, respectively (their annual growth rates stood at 7.8% and 6.6% respectively). Loans to the financial sector3 grew by €29.3 million, whereas those to general government decreased by €7.2 million. At the end of March 2024, loans to these sectors amounted to €10.9 billion, €14.7 billion, €1.5 billion and €351.2 million respectively (see Chart 1);
Chart 1. Loans granted by other MFIs to Lithuanian residents, excluding MFIs (outstanding amounts, end-of-period) |
deposits of Lithuanian residents with credit institutions rose by €22.7 million, or 0.1%, over the month (their annual growth rate was 5.5%). Household deposits went up by €141.0 million, or 0.6%, while non-financial corporation deposits declined by €146.5 million, or 1.4% (their annual growth rates stood at 7.0% and -0.4% respectively). At the end of the month, household and non-financial corporation deposits amounted to €22.6 billion and €10.6 billion respectively. General government and financial sector deposits grew by €21.9 million and €6.3 million respectively in March, to stand at €5.0 billion and €1.1 billion respectively at the end of the month (see Chart 2);
Chart 2. Deposits of Lithuanian residents, excluding MFIs, with other MFIs (outstanding amounts, end-of-period) |
overnight deposits of Lithuanian households with credit institutions rose by €28.5 million, or 0.2%, while those of non-financial corporations declined by €64.2 million, or 0.7%. At the end of the month, the outstanding amounts of overnight deposits of these sectors stood at €15.3 billion and €8.7 billion respectively. Household deposits with agreed maturity with credit institutions increased by €108.4 million, or 1.5%, month on month, whereas those of non-financial corporations decreased by €77.9 million, or 4.2%. The outstanding amounts of these deposits stood at around €7.2 billion and €1.8 billion respectively;
loans to Lithuanian households for house purchase, consumption and other purposes granted by credit institutions rose by €59.3 million (0.5%), €20.2 million (1.8%) and €2.3 million (0.2%) respectively over the month. The outstanding amounts of these loans amounted to €12.3 billion, €1.1 billion and €1.3 billion respectively (see Chart 3), and their annual growth rates totalled 5.9%, 20.4% and 2.7% respectively;
Chart 3. Loans granted by other MFIs to Lithuanian households (outstanding amounts, end-of-period) |
interest rates4 on new business of loans5 granted to households by credit institutions fell by 0.17 percentage points month on month to 6.84%. Interest rates on loans for house purchase, consumption and other purposes decreased by 0.05 percentage points, 0.32 percentage points and 0.94 percentage points respectively. In March 2024, interest rates on these loans comprised 5.68%, 9.67% and 7.56% respectively (see Chart 4);
Chart 4. Interest rates on new business loans for households |
interest rates on new business of household deposits with agreed maturity held with credit institutions decreased by 0.07 percentage points to 3.46%. Interest rates on deposits with agreed maturity of up to 1 month fell by 0.01 percentage points, interest rates on deposits of 1 to 6 months increased by 0.01 percentage points, while the rest (from 6 months to 1 year, from 1 to 2 years and from 2 year onwards) went down by 0.02, 0.12 and 0.19 percentage points respectively. Interest rates on these deposits comprised 0.99%, 2.96%, 3.70%, 3.79% and 3.96% respectively in March 2024 (see Chart 5).
Chart 5. Interest rates on new business deposits with agreed maturity of households |
Detailed data on MFI assets and liabilities is available on the Bank of Lithuania website under MFI balance sheet and monetary statistics.
Detailed data on MFI interest rates is available on the Bank of Lithuania website under MFI interest rate statistics.
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3 The financial sector consists of Lithuania’s investment funds and other financial intermediaries, as well as insurance corporations and pension funds.
4 Weighted interest rates on new business during the reporting month, in percentages per annum.
5 New business covers financial contracts that specify for the first time the interest rate on a loan or the deposit rate, and contracts for existing loans or deposits, which were renegotiated. New business does not cover revolving loans and overdrafts, as well as credit card debt. New business deposits do not cover automatic renegotiations of existing deposit contracts.
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