Ecuador's Big Credit Cooperatives Now Rival Smaller Banks

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Ecuador's large savings and credit cooperatives are no longer a small side channel in the financial system. The latest market update shows a sector that has consolidated, grown and now rivals smaller private banks.
As of the June 1 update by the Superintendencia de Economía Popular y Solidaria (SEPS), the market includes 393 institutions: 387 savings and credit cooperatives, 4 mutualists, 1 National Finance Corporation and 1 central fund, Financoop.
The Big Numbers
| Item | Detail | |---|---:| | Total institutions | 393 | | Savings and credit cooperatives | 387 | | Segment 1 cooperatives | 45 | | Segment 1 threshold | More than $80 million in assets each | | Segment 1 assets through April | More than $24.61399 billion | | Private-bank assets | $79.696 billion | | Segment 1 share vs. private-bank assets | About 31% |
Two cooperatives now appear in the top 10 largest financial institutions in the country. JEP (Juventud Ecuatoriana Progresista), founded in Cuenca more than five decades ago, has more than $3.72311 billion in assets and ranks seventh. Jardín Azuayo, founded in Paute in 1996, has $2.416 billion in assets and ranks tenth.
The sector has also consolidated heavily. Around 1,000 cooperatives operated in 2012, when SEPS was created; today the number is 387. Icored figures place the sector's membership below 4 million in 2012 and at 6.4 million today.
Risk And Regulation
The growth is not risk-free. The article cites cooperative delinquency at 8%, compared with almost 3% for banks. It also notes a regulatory debate: banks argue that cooperatives can place more of each $100 in deposits into credit than private banks can because banks face heavier obligations.
What This Means For Expats
Many expats encounter cooperatives when comparing savings products, local accounts, personal loans or community banking options outside the biggest banks. The growth numbers show why these institutions matter: some are now larger than several private banks.
The practical takeaway is to treat cooperatives as real financial institutions, but still compare deposit protection, fees, access, digital service, liquidity and delinquency exposure before moving significant money.
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