Arab News
Arab news, Mon, Oct 27, 2025 | Jumada al-Awwal 5, 1447
Oman’s money supply grows over 6% in August as credit and deposits expand
Oman:
Oman’s broad money supply expanded 6.1 percent
year on year to 25.8 billion Omani rials ($67.1 billion) at the end of August,
supported by stronger deposit growth and increased liquidity in the banking
system, official data showed.
According to the Central Bank of Oman, the rise
was driven by a 6.9 percent increase in narrow money and a 5.8 percent rise in
quasi-money, which includes savings, time deposits, and foreign currency
deposits.
The expansion in money supply coincided with
steady credit growth and rising deposits across both conventional and Islamic
banks. Total outstanding credit extended by other depository corporations
increased 8.6 percent year on year to 34.1 billion rials at the end of August.
The expansion in monetary aggregates reflects
sustained liquidity conditions and continued policy support for private sector
lending as Oman advances its fiscal and economic reforms under the Vision 2040
strategy.
In its Monthly Statistical Bulletin, the Central
Bank of Oman stated: “The nominal GDP, as per the preliminary data released by
the National Centre for Statistics and Information, showed an increase of 2.4
percent at end of first half of 2025 over the same period of 2024.”
It added: The growth in GDP was mainly driven by
the non-hydrocarbon sector. The non-hydrocarbon sector registered 4.1 percent
growth, while the hydrocarbon sector declined by 0.2 percent.”
Real gross domestic product grew 2.3 percent,
while the hydrocarbon sector recorded a slight contraction of 0.2 percent.
Currency held by the public declined 5 percent,
while demand deposits rose 9.4 percent, reflecting higher banking activity and
continued confidence in the financial system.
In August, credit to the private sector expanded
6.5 percent to 28 billion rials, led by non-financial corporations, which
accounted for 46.7 percent of total private sector credit, followed by
households at 44.7 percent.
Deposits with ODCs rose 7 percent to 33.3 billion
rials, with private sector deposits up 7.5 percent to 22.4 billion rials.
Households represented 50 percent of these
deposits, followed by non-financial corporations at 30.6 percent, financial
corporations at 17.2 percent, and other sectors at 2.2 percent.
The combined balance sheet of conventional banks
grew 7.3 percent from a year earlier, with total outstanding credit reaching
21.4 billion rials.
Investments in government development bonds
increased 12 percent to 2.2 billion rials, while holdings of foreign securities
declined 7 percent to 2.3 billion rials.
Aggregate deposits with conventional banks rose
5.5 percent to 26.1 billion rials, driven by a 9.6 percent increase in
government deposits and a 6.1 percent rise in private sector deposits.
Islamic banks and windows continued to expand at a
faster pace, with total assets up 15.1 percent year on year to 9.1 billion rials,
representing 19.7 percent of total banking system assets.
Financing by Islamic institutions reached 7.3
billion rials, up 13.5 percent, while total deposits grew 12.9 percent to 7.2
billion rials.
Interest rates continued to ease in line with
global trends. The weighted average interest rate on Omani rial deposits with
conventional banks declined to 2.53 percent at end-August 2025 from 2.70 percent
a year earlier, while the weighted average lending rate fell to 5.49 percent
from 5.60 percent.
The overnight interbank lending rate decreased to
4 percent from 5.13 percent, reflecting the CBO’s reduction of the average repo
rate to 5 percent from 6 percent, in line with the US Federal Reserve’s policy
direction.