Arab Times

UAE banks profit to grow about 5% in H2

FAB posts Q2 profit of $697.5m

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DUBAI, July 26, (RTRS): Banks in the United Arab Emirates will post profit growth of around 5 percent in the second half of 2017, similar to the first six months as bad loans ease and lenders weather the Qatar crisis, the head of a local industry group said.

Of the five major banks to publish earnings this quarter, four have reported improved profits thanks to higher net interest income and lower impairment­s for some of them.

“If you look at the bank results that have come in so far, collective­ly there is a growth of five percent,” said Abdulaziz al-Ghurair, Chairman of the UAE Banks Federation (UBF) and chief executive of Mashreq, Dubai’s third largest lender by assets.

“Despite what you see all around us, if you compare it to the rest of the world, this is a fantastic result.”

Lenders have been adjusting to lower oil prices since June 2014, which has moderated double-digit profits and pushed up bad loans for some lenders.

“The whole economy, the government and the banking industry has accepted the oil price will be around $50, so they have to live with that and is part of their planning process,” he said in an interview.

He said banks had set aside full coverage for bad loans in the form of provisions , adding that acted as a “shock absorber” for the banking sector.

“We can handle a tough economy but we don’t see it coming in,” he said.

The level of business people fleeing the country with unpaid debt had improved dramatical­ly and the level of provisions banks would take in 2017 would likely be around half the level of the previous year, said alGhurair.

Economic activity has improved since 2015, when low prices for oil and other commoditie­s and a strong dollar heightened problems for some small businesses. In response, the UBF set up a panel to help struggling business people renegotiat­e their debt with banks. As a result of the problems facing SMEs, banks were a lot more cautious about lending to such businesses and had raised their lending standards, he said.

Banks are also having to contend with a regional rift that involved the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt cutting ties with Qatar on June 5, accusing it of supporting terrorism, a chrge Doha denies.

The UAE Central Bank also last

month ordered local banks to stop dealing with the 59 individual­s and 12 entities with alleged links to Qatar, as well as applying enhanced due diligence for any accounts they hold with six Qatari banks.

He said the impact of the measures on UAE banks would be limited as the local economy was sufficient­ly diversifie­d.

“There’s no demand for expanding the business there [in Qatar], so our clients are waiting to see what the next step is. Everybody is cautious and expecting this will get resolved

and people will go back to their business,” he said.

Meanwhile, first Abu Dhabi Bank , created by a merger of National Bank of Abu Dhabi and First Gulf Bank on Wednesday reported a net profit of 2.56 billion dirhams ($697.5 million) for the second quarter.

Based on a “pro-forma” basis, the net profit was down from 2.68 billion dirhams from a year earlier, primarily due to slower business momentum.

This is the first combined results of Abu Dhabi’s two biggest banks, First Gulf Bank and National Bank of Abu

Dhabi, after their merger in April to create one of the largest banks in the Middle East and Africa. EFG Hermes had projected a profit of 2.57 billion dirhams for the combined bank.

First Abu Dhabi Bank, which reported assets of 625 billion dirhams, said the integratio­n progress was firmly on track but didn’t say when it will be completed.

It said operating expenses dropped 6 percent during the quarter from the year earlier period to 1.38 billion dirhams, while impairment charges fell 12 percent to 611 million dirhams.

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