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Trinidad and Tobago’s Excess Liquidity Tightens as Borrowing Costs Rise

December 17, 2025

Excess liquidity in Trinidad and Tobago’s banking system has continued to decline in recent months, signalling a tightening in domestic financial conditions despite stable monetary policy.

According to the Central Bank’s Monetary Policy Report for November to December 2025, daily average excess liquidity in commercial banks fell sharply from about TT$6.6 billion in May to TT$3.5 billion by October. The report noted that this contraction occurred even as fiscal injections continued and the policy repo rate was held steady at 3.5%.

The Central Bank attributed the decline in liquidity to a combination of offsetting flows. While fiscal operations injected roughly TT$1.9 billion into the system between May and October, these were outweighed by liquidity drains from foreign exchange sales and open market operations. Central Bank foreign exchange sales to authorised dealers removed more than TT$4.5 billion from the system over the period.

As liquidity tightened, interbank market activity increased. Average daily interbank borrowing rose to TT$205.1 million between May and October, nearly double the level recorded during the same period in 2024. Use of the Central Bank’s overnight repurchase facility also picked up, particularly in the third quarter.

Short-term interest rates moved higher in response. The 91-day Treasury bill rate rose by 52 basis points to 2.66% by October, while the weighted average commercial bank lending rate edged up to 6.72% by September. These conditions have begun to weigh on credit growth. Private sector credit expansion slowed to 7.1% year on year in September, down from 8.8% in March, with moderation across consumer, business and mortgage lending.

Economic activity showed mixed signals. Real GDP contracted by 2.1% in the first quarter of 2025, reflecting weakness in both energy and non-energy sectors, before rebounding in the second quarter on stronger upstream energy production. However, non-energy indicators such as construction activity, retail sales and cashless payments suggested a loss of momentum.

Inflation remained subdued throughout the year, easing to 0.4% in October. While this provides policy space, the Central Bank cautioned that external risks including global trade tensions, supply chain disruptions and adverse weather could pose upside risks to prices.

The report also highlighted tighter foreign exchange market conditions. Sales of foreign currency by authorised dealers to the public declined by 6.1% year on year to US$4.63 billion over January to October, while purchases from the public fell by 10%, largely due to lower conversions by energy companies.

Despite these shifts, the Central Bank has not signalled an imminent change in policy, emphasising continued monitoring of domestic and external developments.

Source: (Trinidad Express)

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