The National - News

UAE BANKS FEDERATION EXPECTS RETURN OF GROWTH

Chief Abdulaziz Al Ghurair says banks have learnt to be cautious

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

The head of the UAE Banks Federation expects higher loan growth and profitabil­ity for banks in 2018 as the economy turns a corner. Lenders have been reducing the amount of non-performing loans that piled up during the SME debt crisis in the wake of the 2014 oil crash.

“Despite everything that’s happening around us, we are seeing growth,” Abdulaziz Al Ghurair said yesterday. “It will be better this year from last [year] despite the challenges. Net profit will also grow this year, hopefully better than last year.”

“The economy is going to grow 3 to 4 per cent and with the oil prices stabilisin­g that’s good news because we will benefit,” he said.

The banker, who is also the chief executive of Mashreq Bank, forecast loan growth of 5 per cent to 6 per cent on aggregate for UAE banks this year, compared to 4 per cent last year. At the same time, the profitabil­ity of banks is likely to exceed the 8 per cent growth seen in 2017 compared with 2016.

It’s not just Mr Al Ghurair who is upbeat about the prospects of UAE banks in 2018. Other chief executives and analysts are also optimistic. Mark Robinson, the chief executive of Commercial Bank Internatio­nal, recently told The National that he is expecting 5 per cent loan growth for the bank. Analysts including Saeeda Jaffar at consultant­s Alvarez & Marsal see non-performing loans declining and rising interest rates boosting net interest margins.

Higher interest rates on the dirham, which is pegged to the US dollar and follows the monetary policy of the Federal Reserve, will boost the overall profitabil­ity of banks even though the UAE is at a different point in the economic cycle.

While the US economy is buoyant, the UAE is still recovering from the fallout of the oil crash. Banks in particular are still hurting from big holes in balance sheets caused by SMEs going under in the years of the oil slump.

Still, Mr Al Ghurair said that banks are becoming more cautious about lending to SMEs and are now asking for collateral from owners, a move that will allow them to lend to them at better rates. At the same time, as the bankruptcy law kicks in, more SME owners that fled the country are coming back to renegotiat­e bad debts they left behind. That’s especially the case as banks become more willing to renegotiat­e with insolvent businessme­n, he said.

“The SME honeymoon is over,” Mr Al Ghurair said. “In the last three years, banks supported SME lending, thinking that this will be an engine to drive the economy and was given without many conditions. Today, with the experience we have on the SME lending ... we really will know who is worth lending to, and who is not.”

The executive said he was still waiting for a review from the Central Bank on whether or not banks can pass on VAT to customers for fee and commission services or whether they have to absorb it, which most are currently doing. VAT is not applied to interest from loans.

Mr Al Ghurair also said that the Central Bank would start next month a new way of calculatin­g rates of the Emirates Interbank Offered Rates that would bring about more transparen­cy and accuracy, especially as external auditors, which he didn’t name, will be moni-

 ?? Satish Kumar / The National ?? Abdulaziz Al Ghurair
Satish Kumar / The National Abdulaziz Al Ghurair

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