US insurers' FHLB advances reach record $177.85 billion

Advances from Federal Home Loan Banks to US insurance companies climbed 10.4% to $177.85 billion as of December 31, 2025, according to the FHLBanks Office of Finance. This figure marks a new all-time period-end high and the second straight year of double-digit growth. Insurers broadened their participation in the system amid flourishing spread investing.

US insurance companies deepened their engagement with the Federal Home Loan Bank system in 2025, pushing advances to a record $177.85 billion by year-end. Data from the FHLBanks Office of Finance shows a 10.4% increase from the prior year, the third instance of double-digit growth in four years. This surge reflects insurers' strategy to leverage the system for funding amid favorable market conditions for spread investing. The US life insurance sector saw particularly strong expansion, with deposit-type contract balances before reinsurance rising 18.3% net of surrenders and withdrawals. That pace represents the largest growth in at least 24 years, signaling robust demand for these products. Insurers retain significant borrowing capacity, especially in the property and casualty segment. This positions them to potentially increase FHLB advances further if opportunities arise. The trend underscores insurers' growing reliance on the system for liquidity and investment.

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HDFC Bank announced steady performance in its fourth quarter, with deposits increasing 15% year-over-year and advances rising 12%. Average deposits reached Rs 28.51 lakh crore, while period-end deposits stood at Rs 31.06 lakh crore. The update comes amid recent headlines over the abrupt departure of director Atanu Chakraborty.

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Indian banks achieved a record consolidated net profit exceeding ₹4 lakh crore in FY26. Top lenders including State Bank of India, HDFC Bank, and ICICI Bank contributed more than half of the total.

The Central Bank of Egypt announced that net foreign assets in the country’s banking sector increased to $22.903 billion in April 2026.

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Egypt’s Central Bank reported that the banking sector’s net foreign assets dropped 7.1% in February 2026 to $27.39bn from $29.51bn in January. The decline stems from commercial banks funding a partial exit of foreign investors from local debt amid the Iran war fallout. Meanwhile, local liquidity rose to EGP 14.286trn.

Farmers & Merchants Bancorp posted solid first-quarter results for 2026, with earnings per share rising 7.6 percent.

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