4237_not-searchable
/en/bank-og-finansmarked/statistikker/k3/arkiv
4237
Increase in foreign debt growth
statistikk
2010-04-12T10:00:00.000Z
Banking and financial markets
en
k3, The credit indicator C3, total gross debt, foreign debt, debt, credit, total debtFinancial indicators, Banking and financial markets
false

The credit indicator C3January 2010

Content

Published:

This is an archived release.

Go to latest release

Increase in foreign debt growth

The twelve-month growth in total gross debt (C3) was 4.9 per cent to end-January, up from 0.8 per cent to end-December. The increase stems from foreign debt.

Total gross debt amounted to NOK 4 200 billion at end-January; an increase from NOK 4 186 billion at end-December. About 90 per cent of the gross debt came from mainland Norway.

Credit indicator C3 by credit sources. Twelve-month growth. Per cent

Rise in foreign debt growth

The twelve-month growth in public gross external loan debt increased from -11.5 per cent to 8.3 per cent during January. The twelve-month growth rose because the foreign debt decreased more during January last year than this year. The general public gross foreign debt, which mainly relates to non-financial enterprises, went down from NOK 778 billion to NOK 773 billion in January 2010.

Mainland Norway accounted for 62 per cent of the public gross external loan debt. The foreign debt of mainland Norway amounted to NOK 477 billion at end-January. The twelve-month growth in mainland Norway’s foreign debt was 9.8 per cent to end-January, up from

-1.1 per cent to the previous month. The increase emanates from both long-term and short-term debt.

Offshore industries accounted for the remainder of the foreign debt. For this part of the foreign debt, the annual growth increased from -23.9 per cent to 5.9 per cent in January. The increase emanates mainly from short-term debt, where the major part is corporations’ internal loan debt. As shown in the boxes below, the figures can fluctuate considerably from month to month.

Unchanged domestic gross debt growth

The credit indicator C2 amounted to NOK 3 427 billion at end-January. The twelve-month growth was 4.2 per cent, the same as the previous month. The debt growth in non-financial enterprises was -1.6 per cent, while the growth in household debt was 7.0 per cent. The C2 statistics show that the annual growth in the general public domestic gross debt was unchanged at 4.2 per cent to end-February.

Specifications for the credit indicator C3. Twelve-month growth. Per cent
 
  August 2009    September 2009    October 2009    November 2009    December 2009    January 2010
 
Total gross debt (C3) 6.1 6.9 4.6 6.1 0.8 4.9
Total gross loan debt, mainland-Norway 7.2 6.7 6.1 6.0 3.4 4.8
Domestic gross debt (C2)1 5.9 5.5 5.1 4.8 4.2 4.2
Gross external loan debt 6.8 12.6 2.5 11.8 -11.5 8.3
Gross external loan debt, offshore ind. -12.0 4.2 -14.1 4.4 -23.9 5.9
Gross ext. loan debt, mainland-Norway 23.2 20.8 16.6 17.1 -1.1 9.8
 
1  The growth rates for C2 are in the table presented as they were at the time of the C3 release.

The statistics for external loan debt are based on samples, and therefore associated with more uncertainty than the statistics for domestic debt (C2). For more details concerning sampling, see chapter 3.3 in About the statistics .

C3 is an approximate measure of the size of the total gross debt of the public (households, non-financial enterprises and municipalities) in NOK and foreign exchange. C3 comprises the sum of C2 (the public’s domestic gross debt) and the public’s external loan debt of which C2 constitutes the largest part. The C3 statistics are published approximately one month later than C2.

 

It should be noted that the growth rates for the public’s gross external loan debt vary from month to month due to shifting amounts of short-time internal debt by oil companies. In addition, the first-time-published growth rates are often revised at a later date due to improved information. For more details concerning the public’s gross external loan debt see StatBank.

 

Tables

Published tables