NG debts hit record P12.09 trillion by end-February photo Business World
Debts

NG debts hit record P12.09 trillion by end-February

Apr 2, 2022, 4:46 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

The country’s debts rose to P12.09 trillion as of end February, 70 percent of which were sourced from local lenders. Economists say the debt stock could even be more in March after the US dollar denominated bond issuances that month.

Government borrowings (from local and foreign sources) reached a record P12.09 trillion, or 16.2 percent over that of last year of P10.4 trillion.

The Bureau of Treasury said total debt rose by 0.5 percent or P63.83 billion month on month “due to currency fluctuations, and net financing from both local and foreign sources.”

Of the total, 70 percent of the debt portfolio were from domestic lenders while the rest were from external sources.

Domestic debt stock inclined by 14.3 percent to P8.41 trillion year on year, and by 0.54 percent month on month. The Treasury attributed this to the net issuances of government securities totaling P44.89 billion.

Of the amount, P8.11 trillion were from government securities, which jumped by 18.9 percent year on year and 0.6 percent month on month.

External debt

External debt stood at P3.68 trillion as of end-February, increasing by 20.95 percent from P3.04 trillion a year earlier.

“For February, the increment in external debt was due to the impact of peso depreciation against the (US dollar) amounting to P17.91 billion and the net availment of external obligations amounting to P3.25 billion. These more than offset the P2.74-billion reduction caused by adjustments in other foreign currencies,” the BTr said.

In February, the peso’s weakest closing against the dollar was P51.50 on Feb. 8.

Debt stock to go up some more

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. Chief Economist Michael L. Ricafort said the debt stock will likely go up after the US dollar-denominated bond issuances in March.

“Government debt could still increase in view of the P457.8-billion retail Treasury bond (RTB) issuance and the $2.25 billion, both for the month of March 2022 to finance the budget deficit amid increased infrastructure spending,” he said.

The Treasury raised $2.25 billion from its first triple tranche, US dollar-denominated bond offering last week, which included its first-ever green bonds.

The government said it raised $1 billion from the inaugural 25-year green bond offer, as well as $500 million from five-year bonds, and $750 million from 10.5-year bonds.

Fiscal handicap

The next administration would inherit a fiscal handicap, “given the projected deficit and debt levels,” ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said.

Hopefully, debt levels will not deteriorate further as the Philippines can ill afford a credit rating downgrade in the environment of rising global rates.”

Fitch Ratings last month said it maintained the Philippines’ “BBB” credit rating, but with a “negative” outlook.

A “negative” outlook means Fitch could downgrade the Philippines’ credit rating in the next 12 to 18 months. The outlook was revised to “negative” from “stable” in July 2021 due to the impact of the pandemic on the economy.

Ricafort said that the next administration should “sustain the country’s economic and fiscal efforts,” to improve tax collections and good governance measures, and to help ease the country’s debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio from the internationally accepted 60 percent.

In 2021, the Philippines’ debt-to-GDP ratio hit a 16-year high of 60.5percent, or higher than the 60 percent threshold considered manageable by multilateral lenders for developing economies.

Tags: #BTr, #debtstock, #bondissuances, #creditrating, #economy


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