The National - News

STABLE OUTLOOK FOR GULF BANKS AS OIL PRICES BOOST STATE COFFERS ECONOMY

UAE, Kuwait and Saudi Arabian lenders will be resilient in next 12 to 18 months, credit rating agency Moody’s says

- DEENA KAMEL

Rating agency Moody’s Investors Service assigned Arabian Gulf banks a stable outlook on the back of improving operating conditions, strong capital and weakening but still solid lending.

Banks in the UAE, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia will remain resilient but fiscal pressures will weigh on banks in Oman and Bahrain, where oil prices are set to stay below the levels needed to balance state budgets, Moody’s said in a report yesterday.

“Current oil prices will support increased government spending, and stimulus packages such as UAE’s Expo 2020, the Saudi National Transforma­tion Plan ... will underpin banks’ stable financial performanc­e,” said Nitish Bhojnagarw­ala, a Moody’s vice president and senior credit officer.

In June, Abu Dhabi announced a Dh50 billion threeyear stimulus plan aimed at spurring economic growth, streamlini­ng business procedures, creating jobs and boosting tourism. The government has since rolled out a series of measures to support new industries, ease visa rules, attract foreign investors and boost non-oil gross domestic product.

GCC banks’ credit growth will recover as government spending stimulates the economies and spurs private-sector growth, Moody’s said.

Lending growth in 2019 will range from 4 per cent in Saudi Arabia and 6 to 7 per cent in Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain, according to the report.

Bank lending to the constructi­on and real estate sectors will increase, it said. The property market in Gulf economies such as the UAE has slowed this year, while sales and rents dropped.

Moody’s expects nonperform­ing loans to stand at a “still good” 3 per cent of total loans at the end of next year.

GCC lenders’ capital will stay “broadly stable”, benefiting from modest credit growth and stable bottom line profitabil­ity.

Pressures on profitabil­ity are expected to ease, with net income to tangible assets remaining strong at 1.5 per cent to 2.1 per cent, it said.

“Banks have adapted their cost base to the slowing economic environmen­t, maintainin­g strong efficiency,” Moody’s said. “Consolidat­ion will ease competitio­n and also alleviate some pressure on profitabil­ity.”

Banks in the Gulf are increasing­ly looking to merge in a bid to gain scale to cope with tougher operating conditions as low oil prices in the past three years have squeezed their profit margins.

There is likely to be a stronger performanc­e for regional banks this year as macroecono­mic conditions improve and demand for credit grows, according to analysts and reports from both Moody’s and S&P.

The willingnes­s of government­s to support GCC banks remains high and their capacity to do so is strong, with the exception of smaller Gulf economies, the report said.

Oman and Bahrain are grappling with fiscal deficits after the oil price slump hurt their economies. The outlook shows Moody’s expectatio­ns for how GCC banks’ creditwort­hiness will develop over the next 12 to 18 months.

In October, the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait pledged $10bn in financial support for Bahrain’s reform package that aims to eliminate the kingdom’s budget deficit by 2022. Bahrain plans to balance its budget with measures focusing on increasing revenue capture from the non-oil sector of the economy.

At present, fiscal revenues are heavily oil-dependent, despite the oil sector contributi­ng less than 20 per cent to GDP, according to S&P.

Economic growth for Oman, the biggest Middle East oil producer outside Opec, will accelerate to 3.1 per cent in 2019, up from 2.6 per cent this year, while inflation rises as the sultanate ramps up benchmark interest rates in line with the US Federal Reserve, Fitch Solutions said in a report last month.

The sultanate also plans to introduce a 5 per cent VAT next year.

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