News ·

Microloan rates are decreasing for the second month in a row

The average microloan rate fell to 32.7% — decreasing for the second consecutive month. The decrease in microloans is the result of the Central Bank's strict policy, stricter regulation of MFO, and competition among banks.

Why is this important

The reduction of microcredit rates from 35%+ to 32.7% is a relief for small businesses, borrowers, and a reduction in the debt burden. 32.7% are still high (2.3 times higher than the Central Bank’s 14% rate), but the trend is positive. Difference 40.6% (Anor Bank) — 24.9% (Infinbank) — competition between banks. Car loans are stable at 24.3% — affordable financing for car purchases stimulates demand.

What happened

  • The interest rate on microloans is 32.7%, decreasing for the second month;
  • The leader is Anor Bank (40.6%), the lowest — Infinbank (24.9%);
  • Car loans — 24.3%, stable for several months;
  • The leader is Universal Bank (30%), the lowest is Garant Bank (17.8%).

Microloans

  • Average rate: 32.7% — decrease from 35%+ in July due to the strict policy of the Central Bank (rate 14%), tightening of regulation of MFO, competition of banks.

TOP-5 most expensive:

  • Anor Bank — 40,6%;
  • TBC Bank — 40,0%;
  • Tenge Bank — 39,8%;
  • Apex Bank — 39,5%;
  • Octobank — 37,9%.

TOP-5 cheapest:

  • Infinbank — 24,9%;
  • BRB — 25,5%;
  • Trastbank — 25,6%;
  • OFB — 26,1%;
  • Aloqabank — 26,3%.

Car loans

  • Average rate: 24.3% — stable for several months, result of state support for car loans, competition of banks.

TOP-5 most expensive:

  • Universal Bank — 30,0%;
  • Madad Invest Bank — 27,9%;
  • SQB — 27,4%;
  • Trastbank — 26,6%;
  • Asia Alliance Bank — 26,4%.

TOP-5 cheapest:

  • Garant Bank — 17,8%;
  • Infinbank — 19,1%;
  • Ipoteka Bank — 19,7%;
  • OFB — 21,2%;
  • BRB — 22,3%.

Why are microloans decreasing

  • Central Bank’s strict policy: 14% rate — banks are lowering loan interest rates to maintain competitiveness.
  • Regulation of MFO: The Central Bank is tightening requirements for MFO (capital, reserves, NPL), which reduces their ability to set high rates.
  • Competition: Banks compete for borrowers by lowering interest rates. Infinbank (24.9%) offers the lowest rates, selecting customers from Anor Bank (40.6%).

Why car loans are stable

  • State support: preferential car loans (up to 5 billion for 18-22%) for businesses hiring graduates.
  • Competition: Banks compete for car loans, offering rates of 17.8-30%.
  • Demand: Income growth (+19% of salary) stimulates demand for car loans.

Dispersion of bets

  • Microloans: 40.6% (Anor Bank) — 24.9% (Infinbank) = 15.7 p.p. — huge disparity, shows the absence of a unified pricing policy, competition.
  • Car loans: 30% (Universal Bank) — 17.8% (Garant Bank) = 12.2 p.p. — also a large spread.

Context

  • 32.7% — still high: 2.3 times higher than the Central Bank rate (14%). Microloans are riskier than deposits and require a high margin to cover defaults (NPL 5-10%).
  • Decrease — positive trend: from 35%+ to 32.7% — relief for small businesses, borrowers. Further reduction depends on the Central Bank’s policy, regulation, and competition.
  • Car loans 24.3%: available financing for car purchases. The average car price is $14,330, a 3-year loan at 24.3% — monthly payment of $500-600, available for middle class (salary $500-700).
  • Garant Bank is the leader in low rates: 17.8% car loans, 32.9% microloans — a competitive advantage.

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