BUSINESSECONOMY

Co-op Bank Group Announces Reduction in Lending Rates

CBK cut its main interest rate for the fourth meeting in a row on 5th February 2025 to stimulate lending and boost economic growth

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Co-op Bank Interest rates
Co-operative Bank says reduction in lending rates is intended to stimulate credit growth to key sectors of the economy especially MSMEs.
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Co-op Bank Group has announced a significant 2% reduction in its Base Lending Rate from 16.5% to 14.5% per annum in line with recent signals by Central Bank of Kenya.

This reduction takes effect immediately, the bank said today in a statement. “The effective lending rate will be the Base Lending Rate of 14.5% p.a. plus a margin of between 0% p.a. to 4% p.a. based on the individual customer’s credit profile,” it said.

Co-op Bank Group said reduction in lending rates is intended to stimulate credit growth to key sectors of the economy notably the MSMEs that are a critical engine to drive and sustain economic growth.

CBK cut its main interest rate for the fourth meeting in a row on 5th February 2025, hoping to stimulate lending and boost economic growth. The CBK Monetary Policy Committee cut the Central Bank Rate by 50 basis points to 10.75% on a day that it also reduced the Cash Reserve Ratio by 100 basis points to 3.25%. It said it had started on-site inspections of banks to ensure they pass on the benefits of lower funding costs to customers.

> At Co-operative Bank, a Payslip Can Secure Up To Ksh9 Million Loan

“The committee noted that economic growth decelerated in 2024, and therefore there was scope for a further easing of the monetary policy stance to support economic activity, while ensuring exchange rate stability,” it said in a statement.

CBK has been nudging commercial banks to lower interest rates in line with the progressive benchmark rate cuts.

“When the central bank raised the policy rate, banks were very quick to raise their lending rates,” CBK Governor Kamau Thugge said in the post-MPC brief in December. “All we are asking for is for banks to be fair and act in the same way by reducing interest rates as soon as possible.”

In December, the Kenya Bankers Association said that while the lending rates were set to drop, the reductions would be implemented progressively due to the nature of the banking sector which operates by mobilizing deposits and issuing loans from the same deposit pool.

> How Fixed Income Funds Work in Kenya

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editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

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