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Sri Lanka’s central bank makes Rs274bn profit in 2024

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Sri Lanka’s central bank has made profits of 274 billion rupees, profit in 2024, with interest income from its bond portfolio and foreign assets, which turned positive in the year amid deflationary policy. 

The central bank has booked 219 billion rupees of interest from its rupee securities portfolio, down from 595 billion rupees in 2023 when it earned high rates from Treasury bills, its annual report shows.

Domestic Assets

The central bank bought over three trillion rupees of bills (inflationary policy) to trigger a currency crisis and the eventual sovereign default from 2019 to 2022.

Some of the bills were later effectively rolled over without creating any new inflationary reserves in banks, after monetary stability was reached in September 2022.

The bills were then restructured into lower interest yielding, step down bonds to meet International Monetary Fund gross financing needs and avoid broader Ghana style restructure that prevented rates from coming down.

The restructure led to a large book loss in 2023.

The bonds are now valued in the balance sheet according to a method chosen by the bank.

In the balance sheet local currency assets were reported as 1,748 billion rupees by end December from 2,044 billion with repurchase deals of 333 billion also terminated.

“This portfolio is not an investment portfolio, as the Bank does not purchase Government Securities with the intention of earning an interest income,” the central bank said.

“The Bank purchases or sells Government Securities to inject rupee liquidity into the domestic market or to absorb liquidity from the market in the course of carrying out its monetary policy operations in relation to its core objective, maintaining economic and price stability. 

“Hence, the volume of Government Securities in the Bank’s portfolio is largely determined by its monetary policy operations. Therefore, the Bank does not consider interest rate sensitivities arising from local currency assets.”

Foreign Assets

The central bank also earned 68 billion rupees on its foreign reserves. In 2024 foreign assets turned positive amid deflationary policy.

In 2023 the central bank paid 142 billion rupees in interest and earned only 86 billion on its reserves resulting in a negative carry. 

The central bank borrowed dollars abroad through swaps effectively printing money to suppress rates. The central bank also borrowed from India as forex shortages emerged from its domestic assets purchases.

It also has a loan from the IMF, it borrowed after cutting rates through inflationary policy to create a crisis in 2015/2016. However over 2023 and 2024 the central bank has repaid India a part of the loans and continued to make repayments to the IMF. 

Sri Lanka’s current IMF loan is given to the government as a budget support loan which can be used to repay debt.

In rupee terms there was a 140 billion rupee gain on negative foreign assets as the currency appreciated in 2023.

In 2024 however the central bank’s interest and gains on the foreign asses were 110 billion rupees as it built up foreign assets and expenses were only 83 billion rupees.

The central bank reported 274 billion rupees of profits after charging 22 billion rupees in operating expenses. 

Central bank’s operating expenses, in general, are also inflationary as are profit transfers, which may lead to exchange rate pressure.

Salaries and wages went up steeply to 10.5 billion rupees from 7.5 billion rupees. Pension fund costs were 4.7 billion rupees, compared to a reversal of 3.9 billion rupees last year.  

Source – Economynext

Economy

Sri Lanka’s official reserves fall below US$ 7 billion

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Sri Lanka’s official reserve assets fell below the US$ 7 billion mark again in April 2026, according to the latest data released by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.

The country’s total official reserve assets declined from US$ 7.026 billion recorded at the end of March 2026 to US$ 6.759 billion by the end of April.

Data also showed that foreign exchange reserves — the main component of official reserves — dropped from US$ 6.8 billion to US$ 6.505 billion during the month.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka’s gold reserves declined slightly from US$ 222 million to US$ 219 million.

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Economy

PayPal to launch in Sri Lanka from May 15

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PayPal is set to launch in Sri Lanka on 15 May, in a move expected to expand formal digital payment channels, initially starting with business-to-business (B2B) payments to exporters.

According to sources, the initial rollout will focus on enabling inward payments to exporters, with several local banks already appointed as agents for the service.

While an official announcement is yet to be made, sources said the launch is currently scheduled for 15 May, with the Presidential Secretariat likely to host the event.

Banking sector officials have already participated in familiarisation sessions relating to PayPal’s entry into Sri Lanka, while PayPal representatives are understood to have visited the country last month for discussions with local stakeholders and financial institutions regarding the rollout framework.

The move follows months of engagement between the Government, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL), and the private sector, aimed at enabling regulated inward remittance functionality through the global online payments platform.

In February, Digital Economy Ministry Secretary Waruna Sri Dhanapala said Sri Lanka had entered the final stage of enabling inward remittances through PayPal, describing it as a key milestone in modernising the country’s digital payments ecosystem.

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Sri Lanka tests online ticket booking platform or intercity bus travel

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Sri Lanka has launched a pilot programme to enable online seat reservations for long-distance bus travel, Transport and Highways Minister Bimal Rathnayake announced today.

Speaking at a media briefing, the Minister said buses remain the most widely used mode of daily transport in the country, even surpassing trains in popularity. 

However, he noted that passengers currently face inconvenience as they must physically visit bus terminals to reserve seats, making travel planning difficult.

“This new system will allow passengers to reserve seats in advance and plan their journeys more efficiently. Our aim is to make daily life easier,” he said.

The initiative will initially be implemented through private bus operators, with plans to expand the service to the Sri Lanka Transport Board (SLTB) at a later stage.

Sri Lanka Telecom Chairman Mothilal De Silva stated that the platform was introduced ahead of the New Year holiday period in collaboration with several private sector partners.

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