The company Financiera de Inversión has received authorization to start operating as a private bank in the country.
With capital of $15 million, the company which has so far only operated in the financial segment will start providing banking services under the brand Banco INV, and will be subject to the regulation required of participants of the banking system.
With the purchase of another 20% stake, Bancolombia Group now holds 60% of the shares of the Group Agromercantil de Guatemala.
Two years after the acquisition of a 40% stake of Argomercantil Holding Group, Grupo Bancolombia has decided to consolidate its presence in the country by acquiring a further 20%. The Colombian company said the acquisition is part of a consolidation strategy in Guatemala and Central America.
Analysis by Fitch Ratings projects that banks in the region will maintain strong balance sheets and have stable profitability in 2014.
Excerpted from Fitch Ratings:
Differential Growth and Opportunities: Low financial depth, in most systems, continues to provide significant opportunities for expansion of bank balance sheets; although this is limited by low average income levels.
The group has announced that as part of its long-term strategy it will withdraw from the consumer banking business in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Panama, Guatemala and Nicaragua.
Extract from a statement issued by Citigroup:
Citigroup today announced strategic actions to accelerate the transformation of its Global Consumer Banking (GCB) to focusing on those markets where it has the largest scale and growth potential.
In the last year, the sector was characterized by lower loan growth, lower returns and higher funding costs.
Fitch has presented its Special Report on the Central American Banking System, which analyzes the performance of the sector in the period between July 2012 and June 2013.
The rating company highlights:
Low Credit Growth:
The loan portfolios of most banking systems in Central America slowed their growth rates in 2013, in line with the downward revision of the region's GDP. In June 2013, the annual growth of loan portfolios of five Central American countries stood in the range of 6% to 12% in real terms, although it was only 2.2% in Honduras. According to Fitch Ratings, loans in the region will close 2013 with real growth of about 7% (2012: 8.9%). Panama will lead the growth of the loan portfolio, but inflationary pressures throughout the region will be an additional limit to real credit expansion.
In the last ten years the number of banks operating in the country fell by 52.6%.
According to information from the Superintendency of Banks (SIB), in 1999 there were 38 banks operating in the country, dropping to 18 in 2010. In contrast, sector earnings rose 1736.7%.
Bankers and financial analysts agree today that the financial system is stronger.