Khaleej Times

‘LENDING’ A HELPING HAND

Bank loans poised to grow as economy undergoes a correction phase

- Issac John

The UAE banking sector will see lending growth to accelerate slightly in 2021 after a muted increase in 2020 as the economy undergoes a correction phase, S&P Global Ratings said in a report on Sunday.

Expo 2020 Dubai and borrowing by the government and government-related entities (GRES) will support lending growth that signifies the start of a robust recovery. The Central Bank of the UAE has forecast that the economy is likely to post 2.5 per cent growth this year after a contractio­n of 5.8 per cent in 2020. The apex bank expects to see a full economic recovery in 2022, with growth rising to a 3.5 per cent rate.

“Corporate borrowing is expected to improve only slightly as some deferred capital expenditur­e in 2020 might happen in 2021, along with refinancin­g of existing debt. We expect private sector leverage at nine per cent to 10 per cent of nominal GDP over the next few years,” S&P analysts Puneet Tuli and Mohamed Damak said in the report.

As the pandemic, lower oil prices and continued pressure on the real estate sector increased risks for UAE banks in 2020, lending opportunit­ies, at both the retail and corporate levels, remained muted, leading to one per cent loan book growth, compared with six per cent in 2019. The pandemic and contractio­n in many sectors forced companies to postpone capital expenditur­e. Shutdowns, job losses, and salary cuts in the private sector added to the poor demand for retail loans, S&P said.

Corporate borrowing is expected to improve only slightly as some deferred capital expenditur­e in 2020 might happen in 2021, along with refinancin­g of existing debt. We expect private sector leverage at 9-10 % of nominal GDP Puneet Tuli and Mohamed Damak, analysts at S&P Global Ratings

However, being a wealthy economy with strong fiscal and external positions, the strength of the government’s net asset position had helped counteract the negative impact of lower oil prices on economic growth since late 2015, said the report.

Currently, the UAE economy is going through a correction phase. The pandemic has provided a renewed challenge to the economy and real estate market. “This is because the slowdown is happening when the real estate sector is under significan­t stress and other UAE sectors, such as hospitalit­y, trade, and discretion­ary consumer goods, are experienci­ng a marked decline in revenue.”

The banking system’s total exposure to the real estate and constructi­on sectors stood at 28 per cent as of year-end 2020, assuming that one-third of personal loans for consumptio­n purposes are channeled to real estate, the report noted.

“Residentia­l real estate prices have declined more than 40 per cent since the peak in second-quarter 2014. We expect prices to remain under pressure in 2021, although the decline in prices will be slower, and we do not foresee a meaningful near-term recovery given the current supply-demand imbalance,” it said.

Another 20 per cent of the banking sector’s total lending covered sectors such as trade, transport, storage, communicat­ion, and personal loans for business purposes at year-end 2020. A portion of these loans is at risk, which in addition to stress in real estate will lead to increased credit losses for UAE banks, the report noted.

S&P expects the real estate sector’s problem loans to increase further once current regulatory forbearanc­e measures are lifted and banks start to account for the impact of the economic shock.

However the process is expected to be gradual, minimising the overall impact. Those measures include the UAE central bank’s Targeted Economic Support Scheme that helped ease the pressure on corporate issuers and small- and mediumsize­d enterprise­s.

For most rated banks in the UAE, the top 20 corporate borrowers represent more than 25 per cent of their corporate lending exposure.

“We believe that risks pertaining to weaker standards are higher for UAE’S banking sector than peers in GCC, because UAE banks have higher exposure to real estate and constructi­on sectors and other risky segments, such as struggling GRES than GCC peers. In addition, UAE banks operate with relatively higher average loanto-value than peers,” said the report.

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