The Central Bank of Luxembourg published provisional banking statistics showing the aggregate balance sheet total of Luxembourg credit institutions reached EUR 986,949 million at 31 March 2025, up from EUR 980,839 million at 28 February 2025 (+0.62%). On an annual basis, the balance sheet total increased by 3.10%, with the monthly change on the asset side mainly linked to higher securities holdings and higher claims on other sectors, while the liability side was driven by liabilities to other sectors. The net interbank position (interbank claims minus interbank liabilities) increased by EUR 7,736 million (+3.22%) to EUR 248,069 million at end-March 2025. Loans to non-bank customers rose by EUR 1,269 million (+1.11%) between February and March 2025 and by EUR 1,779 million (+1.56%) over 12 months, with year-on-year lending to non-financial corporations down EUR 4,222 million (-15.28%), household mortgage lending up EUR 617 million (+1.5%), and lending to other financial intermediaries up EUR 7,008 million (+18.98%). On the liability side, resident non-bank deposits increased by EUR 7,753 million (+2.57%) month on month and by EUR 37,175 million (+13.63%) over 12 months, including a EUR 29,705 million (+16.59%) rise in deposits from other financial intermediaries (67.4% share at 31 March 2025). The Central Bank of Luxembourg made the underlying statistical series on credit institutions’ balance sheets available via its website.
Central Bank of Luxembourg 2025-04-30
Central Bank of Luxembourg reports credit institutions’ total balance sheet up 0.62% to EUR 986,949 million in March 2025
The Central Bank of Luxembourg reported that the aggregate balance sheet total of Luxembourg credit institutions reached EUR 986,949 million at the end of March 2025, marking a 0.62% increase from February and a 3.10% rise year-on-year. The net interbank position grew by EUR 7,736 million (+3.22%), while loans to non-bank customers increased by EUR 1,269 million (+1.11%) month-on-month. Resident non-bank deposits rose by EUR 7,753 million (+2.57%) in March, with a notable increase in deposits from other financial intermediaries.