Oman Daily Observer

Strong credit offtake fuels banking sector growth

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FROM P13 rather than excessive credit growth, it pointed out.

According to the report, banks in the Sultanate have been able to grow their lending portfolio without much increase in NPLs, which augers well for the credit risk in the banking sector. The NPLs at the end of 2016 were 1.78 per cent (2015: 1.73 per cent) of the gross loans. The low NPL ratio suggest satisfacto­ry asset quality and well contained credit risk.

Moreover, the existing loan portfolio of banks is well covered against expected losses through adequate provisions with coverage ratio (provisions to NPLs) of 70 per cent (148 per cent including general provisions) which compares favourably with regional cohorts.

The degree of concentrat­ion in the Omani banking sector, as measured by Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI), reflects that concentrat­ion in the banking sector in Oman is moderately high but remains in line with the regional cohorts, according to the report.

In order to deal with the risks emanating from the presence of large institutio­ns, the CBO had issued guidelines to identify, supervise, and regulate Domestic Systemical­ly Important Banks. Moreover, as a part of the preparedne­ss, Bank Resolution Framework is being finalised to amicably deal with systemical­ly important banks.

Sectoral distributi­on of credit, particular­ly in the household loan segment, highlights credit risk concentrat­ion in banking sector. Banks also have substantia­l direct and indirect exposure to the real estate sector. At present, overall, household credit risk indicators remain at low levels and there are no signs of significan­t stress in the Omani real estate market. Moreover, the prudential regulation­s on lending are expected to keep the risks in these sectors at manageable levels.

Amid a growing loan portfolio, the banks on average, comfortabl­y maintained the cash reserve requiremen­ts without significan­t signs of strains, the CBO said. Liquidity conditions in Oman tightened because of the budgetary needs of the government and decreased inflows due to depressed oil prices. However, accommodat­ing regulatory changes and external sufficient liquidity in market.

Banks operating in Oman have traditiona­lly low reliance on wholesale markets. Government deposits, however, remained an important source of funding for the banks. The high level of public sector deposits combined with the reduced cashflows of the government in the wake of dwindling oil revenues could pose a covert yet potent risk of significan­t withdrawal of deposits from the banking sector. However, the risk of withdrawal is not imminent as the government resorted to borrowing from internatio­nal markets to finance its budget deficit. Moreover, the stress tests showed that the banks operating in Oman remained fairly resilient to the assumed deposit runoffs. funding kept the domestic

Following the Federal Reserve’s lead, the policy rates and interbank rates in Oman have started to increase. The rising policy rates have also been partially passed through to the retail deposit and lending rates. The rising interest rates might put pressure on the bottom lines of the banks. However, the stress testing exercise shows that the interest rate risk in banks is within reasonable bounds if they face a 200 basis point adverse movement in interest rates.

Furthermor­e, the banks remained adequately capitalise­d as the benchmark Capital to Risk Weighted Assets Ratio of the banking sector increased to 16.8 per cent at the end of 2016 from 16.5 a year ago. At the system level, even the Tier-1 capital was sufficient to meet the regulatory requiremen­ts, it said.

Despite challengin­g macroecono­mic conditions, stringent prudential norms for credit, rising funding costs, and declining Net Interest Margin (NIM), the banks maintained their profitabil­ity, the CBO report noted.

“The banks netted over RO 438 million in pre-tax profits (2015: RO 439 million). The profitabil­ity ratios, ROA and ROE, remained steady at 1.5 per cent and 10.5 per cent, respective­ly. The healthy bottom line of the banks not only reinforced their buffers but also enhanced their ability to support future growth,” it stated.

Islamic banking in Oman achieved remarkable growth since its inception about four years ago. At the end of December 2016, the Islamic banking assets formed 10.3 per cent of the total banking sector assets. With an annual growth of 37 per cent, total assets held by Islamic banks and the Islamic banking windows of convention­al banks exceeded RO 3 billion, while the total assets of foreign banks stood RO 1.9 billion at the end of 2016, it said.

Islamic banking institutio­ns (IBIs) recorded remarkable improvemen­t in profitabil­ity, according to the CBO. The aggregate pre-tax profits of IBIs during 2016 increased to RO 13.6 million from RO 1.6 million in 2015. Due to fast paced growth, the Islamic banking sector as a whole is gaining systemic importance, the report said.

Despite the prevailing macroecono­mic challenges, the banks remained resilient to stressed scenarios at the aggregate level, the report said. Results of different solvency stress tests did not flag an increased vulnerabil­ity of solvency of the banks mainly due to their high capital adequacy ratio as well as their limited exposure to equity and forex. The robustness of the banking sector is also echoed in the macro-financial stress tests where banks on average remained solvent even in the severe scenario, the apex bank said.

When assessed with respect to the internatio­nal benchmarks (of one business week or five days), all of the banks were found to be in a comfortabl­e position to face the liquidity shocks under the assumed stress scenarios. At the end December 2016, the banking system as a whole would be able to sustain a liquidity shock for an average of 18 days with only cash and a total of 20 days with cash and securities, it noted.

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