Sri Lanka, a country of 20.48 million (2013), has
historically had 15 percent of its population live in urban regions.1 However,
this urban percentage is expected to grow by 3-4 percent annually.2
Combined with high population density in certain districts and existing housing
needs, this increased urbanization rate has resulted in high demand for housing
finance.2 Sri Lanka’s housing finance sector is currently only 6.8
percent of its GDP. The mortgage lending market has had real annual growth
rates of 10-30 percent in the past few years. While Sri Lanka currently has a system of
directed credit with a highly segmented market, the country is moving toward an
integrated, market driven housing finance system.2 The current housing supply gap is estimated to be at
350,000 units (2010).2 The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL)
estimates annual requirements for new houses at by 50,000-100,000 units per
year.2 The housing finance market in Sri Lanka is segmented between
private commercial banks and state-owned banks, with a small number of other
financial institutions making housing loans. Private commercial banks hold 75
percent of the mortgage market share, while the National Savings Bank (NSB),
State Mortgage and Investment Bank (SMIB), Housing Development Finance
Corporation Bank (HDFC) hold 9, 7, and 6 percent of the market respectively.2
Microfinance institutions, accounting only for 0.1 percent of financial
institutions’ assets, typically only fund housing repair and upgrades.2
Most housing finance offered is in long-term,
fixed-rate mortgages, with private banks experimenting with adjustable rate
loans. The SMIB and NSB offers 10 year
fixed rate of 13.5-14.5 percent, while HDFC offer a fixed rate of 16 percent
with similar loan lengths (2013).2 For low- to middle-income
borrowers, lenders will allow a maximum of 40 percent of the debt service to
income ratio, and 60 percent for higher income borrowers.2 The maximum
loan-to-value ratio is 80% percent for housing (50-60 percent for land), as of
2013.2 The average loan size at private commercial banks and
the NSB is around $7530 USD (1 million SLR), $4518 (0.6 million SLR) at the
SMIB, and $1882-3765 (0.25-0.5 million SLR) at the HDFC.2
Microfinance lenders offer loans ranging from $113-$753 (15,000 to 100,000 SLR).2 Currently, the Sri Lankan government’s involvement in
housing finance development is limited to a facilitative role, as opposed to a
direct provider role.2 As such, the private sector has emerged as
the major funding provider for housing finance development for middle- to
high-income groups, while the government and microfinance institutions cater to
the lower income groups.2 While the state-owned participants in the
housing finance markets provide aid, the lack of market viability for private
sector companies makes it difficult for a wide range of Sri Lankans to gain
enough funding to purchase their own homes.2 In addition, this
system has weakened due to competing governmental priorities and fiscal
pressures, further necessitating a self-sustaining housing finance market.2 Sources: 1 The World Bank. 2 Nenova, Tatiana.
“Expanding Housing Finance to the Underserved in South Asia: Market Review and
Forward Agenda.” 2010.
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