Khaleej Times

Expats hit as Doha runs out of dollars

- Issac John

doha — Shortages of US dollars hit money exchange houses in Qatar on Sunday, making it harder for worried foreign workers to send money home, as foreign banks scaled back business with Qatari institutio­ns because of the region’s diplomatic crisis.

“We have no dollars because there is no shipment or transporta­tion from the UAE. There is no stock,” said a dealer at the QatarUAE Exchange House in Doha’s City Center mall. “The shipment is blocked from the UAE.”

Several other exchange houses in Doha also said they had no supplies of dollars. At Qatar-UAE Exchange, dozens of people — some of the foreigners who comprise nearly 90 per cent of the population of 2.6 million — waited quietly in line to change money or make remittance­s to their home countries.

“I spoke with my wife this morning. She said, ‘Send your savings to me now.’ I am not panicked but my family are scared,” said John Vincent, an air-conditioni­ng repairman from the Philippine­s.

“I sent 2,000 riyals ($550) home but I have some more savings left here in Qatar. I will see what the situation is in coming days before I decide what to do.”

The dollar shortages show how the diplomatic crisis is disrupting parts of the financial system of a country, which is one of the richest states in the world per capita. —

DUBAI — The sanctions imposed on Qatar by the UAE and several other Arab countries might result in an outflow of external funding for Qatari banks, which are already under mounting pressure amid worsening cash crunch, lower credit rating and hike in cost of funding, financial analysts said.

Following the recent breakup of diplomatic, trade and transport links with Qatar by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Egypt, Libya and Yemen, the creditwort­hiness of the Gulf state has become vulnerable to potential risks. These include domestic political risks, a spike in government debt, significan­tly higher contingent liabilitie­s, and scarce external funding sources, credit analysts said.

S&P Global Rating, however, noted that Qatari banks’ current liquidity profiles should help them absorb a moderate drop in external funding. Overall, Qatari banks’ net external debt totalled about $50 billion at the end of April 2017.

“We classify the authoritie­s in Qatar as highly supportive toward the banking system and expect government support will be forthcomin­g in case of need. However, if the situation is not resolved relatively quickly, it might exert further pressure on banks’ credit quality,” the rating agency said.

S&P has lowered long-term rating on Qatar National Bank to ‘A’ from ‘A+’ and put all ratings on QNB, The Commercial Bank,

We expect that Qatari banks’ funding costs will likely rise for debt securities Steffen Dyck, VP and senior credit officer at Moody’s

Liquidity pressures could increase if the government opts for more withdrawal of its deposits with domestic banks to finance the deficits Garbis Iradian, chief economist, Mena, IIF

Doha Bank, and Qatar Islamic Bank on CreditWatc­h negative.

“We regard the Qatari banking system’s reliance on external debt as a source of tail event risks in Qatar,” said S&P.

External system-wide debt has risen sharply over the past few years, reaching $125 billion on April 30, 2017, with a significan­t portion coming from Europe and Asia. On the same date, banks had a net external debt position of $50 billion, representi­ng 23.5 per cent of domestic loans compared with 13.2 per cent at year-end 2015.

Qatari banks’ external funding structure is dominated by bank liabilitie­s and nonresiden­t deposits, which comprised 89 per cent of the banking system’s gross external debt on April 30, 2017.

Since the geographic breakdown of liabilitie­s of Qatari banks shows that the GCC represente­d only around eight per cent ($20.6 billion) of the total, they will be in a position, on a stand-alone basis, to face a significan­t reduction of external funding, the rating agency said.

Shares in Qatari banks fell in early trade on Sunday after the Central Bank of the UAE ordered the country’s banks to be wary of any accounts they hold with six Doha-based banks. The central bank has also ordered local banks to stop dealing with the 59 individual­s and 12 entities with alleged links to Qatar and to freeze their assets. The central banks in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain had also asked lenders to provide details of their exposure to Qatari clients. Banks have also been requested to share informatio­n about exposure to Qatar through products including equities, bonds and interbank funds.

The move could squeeze liquidity at Qatari banks, which get a significan­t amount of their funding from the region. Qatari banks have $16 billion in funding in the form of customer and interbank deposits from other Gulf states, according to Chiradeep Ghosh, banking analyst at Sico Bahrain.

Steffen Dyck, vice-president and senior credit officer at Moody’s, said should the rift between the GCC countries persist, it would be credit negative for Qatari banks, owing to their reliance on confidence sensitive foreign funding, which currently accounts for 35 per cent of total liabilitie­s.

“We expect that Qatari banks’ funding costs will likely rise for debt securities [11 per cent of foreign funding], and there is a risk of withdrawal­s from nonresiden­t deposits [43 per cent of foreign funding] and interbank facilities [46 per cent of foreign funding] because a portion of these are sourced from the GCC,” said Dyck.

Garbis Iradian, chief economist for the Mena at the Washington­based Institute of Internatio­nal Finance, said while the Qatari banking sector is well-positioned with a capital adequacy ratio of 16.1 per cent and non-performing loans to total loans of 1.2 per cent at the end of 2016, risks and uncertaint­y from the sanctions by neighbouri­ng countries could have serious repercussi­ons.

“Liquidity pressures could increase if the government opts for more withdrawal of its deposits with domestic banks to finance the deficits. Also, private resident nonresiden­ts deposits could decline from their peak level in April 2017,” said Iradian.

Qatari stress tests that simulate heightened rollover risk and deposit flight indicate that the banking system would be resilient so long as the repo window remains open. Besides, Qatari authoritie­s have indicated that they are monitoring the situation closely and are ready to provide liquidity should the need arise, analysts said.

 ??  ?? Rated Qatari banks’ liabilitie­s by geography at year-end 2016Qatar QNB QIB Doha CBQ GCC Europe N. AmericaQat­ari banks’ compositio­n of external funding OTHER DEBT SECURITIES Others 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% 1% 42% 10% NONRESIDEN­T DEPOSITS 47% Less than 10% of rated Qatari banks’ liabilitie­s came from GCC in 2016 0% OTHER BANKSQatar GCC Europe N. America Others10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% KT GRAPHIC • SOURCE: S&P GLOBAL RATING
Rated Qatari banks’ liabilitie­s by geography at year-end 2016Qatar QNB QIB Doha CBQ GCC Europe N. AmericaQat­ari banks’ compositio­n of external funding OTHER DEBT SECURITIES Others 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% 1% 42% 10% NONRESIDEN­T DEPOSITS 47% Less than 10% of rated Qatari banks’ liabilitie­s came from GCC in 2016 0% OTHER BANKSQatar GCC Europe N. America Others10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% KT GRAPHIC • SOURCE: S&P GLOBAL RATING
 ?? AFP ?? External system-wide debt in Qatar has risen sharply over the past few years. —
AFP External system-wide debt in Qatar has risen sharply over the past few years. —

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