The National - News

QATAR BANK OUTLOOK CUT TO NEGATIVE BY MOODY’S

▶ The rating agency says it expects the pace of economic growth to slow as a result of the crisis

- ECONOMY MAHMOUD KASSEM

Qatar’s banks have had their outlook downgraded to negative from stable by Moody’s Investors Service amid weakening operating conditions and continued funding pressures facing lenders in the wake of a political crisis between the country and four other Arab states that include Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

The rating agency said concerns about the ability of Qatar to diversify its economy and the impact that will have on the profitabil­ity of banks as loan growth stalls and the level of non-performing loans rise underpinne­d its decision.

“We expect that a prolonged period of uncertaint­y caused by the ongoing dispute between Qatar and some of its [GCC] peers could hamper the government’s economic diversific­ation plans and impact growth,” analysts at Moody’s said.

The UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt on June 5 broke diplomatic ties with Qatar and cut off air, sea and land access to the country over Doha’s support for “terrorist groups aiming to destabilis­e the region”. The dispute is the most serious between GCC members since the organisati­on’s creation in 1981.

Moody’s expects Qatar’s economic growth to slow to 2.4 per cent from an average high of 13.3 per cent recorded between 2006 and 2014. Despite that slowdown however, Qatar is still growing at a faster rate than many of its GCC peers, mainly because of the government’s massive spending spree on infrastruc­ture ahead of the country’s hosting of the Fifa World Cup in 2022.

“These projects are the main drivers of public and private sector economic growth,” the analysts noted in their report.

Even so, the ability of banks to lend will likely be curtailed by the decline in economic growth. Credit growth is expected to decelerate to 5 to 7 per cent in 2017 and 2018 compared to a high of 15 per cent in 2015.

That decline will take place even as the government tries to build buffers. Qatar’s government proceeded with capital injections totalling 11.2 billion riyals (Dhs11.3 billion) to increase banks’ capital buffers and allow them to participat­e in upcoming infrastruc­ture projects, in addition to purchasing of a portion of banks’ real-estate loans and domestic equity investment­s (at their original cost) for 20.9bn riyals, according to the agency.

Although the government’s capacity to extend support to the banking sector remains strong, “it is deteriorat­ing” as a result of fiscal pressures, Moody’s said. Still, the rating agency said that the government has the ability to support the banks as public sector assets are estimated to be at about US$304bn.

Moody’s rates 10 banks in Qatar, six convention­al and four Islamic, which all told account for 96 per cent of bank assets in the country. Those are Qatar National Bank, Qatar Islamic Bank, the Commercial Bank, Masraf Al Rayan, Doha Bank, Al Khalij Commercial Bank, Barwa Bank, Qatar Internatio­nal Islamic Bank, Ahli Bank, Internatio­nal Bank of Qatar.

To date the fallout from the political crisis appears to have had a limited impact on bank profitabil­ity.

Qatar National Bank, the biggest bank by assets, said in July that its second-quarter profit rose 2 per cent to 3.45bn riyals, beating analysts’ expectatio­ns.

There had been a belief that the Gulf states opposing Qatar may withdraw deposits from Qatari banks, pushing the cost of borrowing higher but so far such moves have not materialis­ed.

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