A drive to establish white farmers from SA throughout the African continent has commenced.
Bank on SA
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The South African banking system remained stable, and banks were
adequately capitalised and profitable, the SA Reserve Bank (SARB)
said in its Bank Supervision Annual Report 2008.
This was in spite of the "turmoil experienced in international
financial markets and the domestic cyclical economic developments
during 2008", the SARB said.
South Africa's top commercial banks — Absa, FirstRand, Standard
Bank and Nedbank — had all said that future earnings would be
lower.
This was due to consumers defaulting and debts rising as South
Africa's first recession in 17 years took its toll.
According to the SARB's report, liquid assets held by South
Africa's banks exceeded the statutory liquid assets requirement
throughout 2008.
The liquid assets held, measured against the minimum liquid
asset requirement, amounted to 115.5 percent at the end of December
2008.
The SARB said the increase in interest rates, other
cyclical
economic developments in South Africa and the turmoil experienced
in international financial markets contributed to credit risk
ratios deteriorating during 2008.
Impaired advances increased to R87.3-billion at the end of
December 2008.
Impaired advances as a percentage of gross loans and advances
deteriorated from 2.3 percent at the end of January 2008 to 3.8
percent at the end of December 2008, the SARB added.