March 31 (Bloomberg) -- Colombia's economy probably
expanded above 5 percent in the fourth quarter, making 2005 the
fastest year of growth in a decade, as a strengthening peso and
falling interest rates spurred a surge in consumer demand.
Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of a country's
output of goods and services, grew 5.18 percent from the year-
earlier period, according to the medium forecast of 15 analysts
surveyed by Bloomberg, after growth of 5.75 percent in the third
quarter. The statistics agency reports fourth-quarter growth
today as well as 2004 growth revised to include changes in the
way the agency measures industrial output.
``We're very optimistic about the economy's expansion
judging by the strong readings of consumer confidence, which is
a leading indicator of private consumption,'' said Carola Sandy,
an economist at Credit Suisse First Boston Inc. in a telephone
interview from New York. ``We also continue to see a lot of
domestic investment.'' Sandy expects the economy to grow 5.40
percent for the full year and 5.20 percent in 2006.
Falling interest rates and improved confidence is
encouraging Colombians to take out loans, leading banks to
increase lending while paring their holdings of local government
bonds, according to Sergio Clavijo, president of the National
Association of Financial Institutions, known as ANIF.
Colombia's consumer confidence index rose to 25.1 in
February from 13.32 a year earlier, according to Fedesarrollo,
an independent think tank for economic studies. Consumer loans
including credit cards rose 42 percent to 4.8 trillion pesos ($2
billion) in the first three months of 2006 compared with a year
earlier, according to a March 24 report by the nation's bank
association.
Home Loans
``Mortgage credit has been growing at a slow pace due to
reluctance about taking out loans indexed to inflation,''
Clavijo, a former member of the central bank's board said in an
interview. ``Banks are seeing the growth potential of this loan
segment and now for the first time, we see these institutions
offer 10, 15-year home loans at a fixed-rate of around 1 percent
monthly.'' Home loans fell to 6.8 trillion pesos in December,
compared with 10.9 trillion pesos in the same month in 2002.
In a bid to stem the peso's 3.5 percent, 12-month gain --
the 10th-best performance against the dollar of the 62
currencies tracked by Bloomberg -- the central bank kept the
benchmark lending rate at 6 percent, a three year low, for a
sixth straight month in its last meeting on March 17.
The bank has cut the rate four times since February 2004,
bringing it down from 7.25 percent.
Lending Outlook
Colombia's benchmark index of 90-day deposit rates used by
financial institutions as a peg for setting rates for loans
followed the central bank's benchmark rate lower, dropping to
5.92 percent this week from 7.44 percent a year earlier.
Bancolombia on March 2 announced a new nominal fixed-rate
for home loans of 1 percent monthly, 3 basis points less than
its preferential rate. Following suit, BBVA Colombia, the
country's third-biggest bank by assets and the leader in the
mortgage market, cut its rate for home loans to 0.99 percent
monthly for loans of up to 15 years.
``Banks have been adding to their portfolio of inflation-
linked government debt to cushion against a loss in fixed-rate
loans if inflation quickens,'' Clavijo said. ``As long as the
central bank keeps inflation under control, we won't see much
risk in these new mortgage rates.''
An increase in both interest rates abroad and the central
bank's overnight lending rate will hurt growth this year,
according to Daniel Castellanos, head analyst at BBVA Colombia,
a unit of Spain's Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA.
Inflation Concern
Central bank board member Juan Mario Laserna on March 24
said the bank plans to raise interest rates this year in an
effort to control inflation in 2007.
``We're expecting the economy to expand at a lower rate
than last year,'' Castellanos said. ``As interest rates rise,
consumer demand and investment become more costly, hurting two
of the main motors of growth in 2005.'' Castellanos expects the
economy to expand 5.1 percent in 2005, compared with 4.4 percent
this year.
Colombia's 12-month inflation rate fell to 4.19 percent
through February, its lowest level since 1962, from 4.56 percent
through January. The central bank targets inflation between 4
percent and 5 percent this year.
Total investment in Colombia last year rose to 22 percent
of GDP, the highest since 1994, from 15 percent in 2002, the
year President Alvaro Uribe took office, according to the
National Planning Department. Retail sales rose 9.3 percent in
the year through December compared with the same period a year
earlier, according to the statistics agency.
-- Editor: Jameson.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Andrea Jaramillo in Bogota at
ajaramillo1@bloomberg.net .