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MASHREQ SAYS 25% OF RETAIL CLIENTS HAVE REQUESTED COVID-19 RELIEF

▶ Bank says most requests are for payment holidays on credit cards and personal loans in bid to conserve cash

- SARMAD KHAN

A quarter of Mashreq Bank’s retail customers have availed themselves of government-led relief measures to ease their financial burden during the coronaviru­s pandemic, a senior executive said.

The lender has also registered a drop in new retail business, with customers trying to conserve their cash to ride out the economic slowdown brought about by Covid-19.

“We have gone ahead and delivered on the central bank’s guidelines, but we have also proactivel­y gone beyond that,” Subroto Som, senior executive vice president and head of Mashreq’s Retail Banking Group, told The National.

“Today, almost a fourth of our customer base has availed of them [support packages] and I’m sure it [the number] will go up in the near future.”

Mashreq, one of the oldest lenders in Dubai, said it received requests for payment holidays mostly from its credit card customers.

“I am talking primarily about retail banking ... so the credit card and personal loan [business] happens to be big [in terms requests for relief],” Mr Som said.

“We also have relief offered and accepted by our mortgage customers ... so it is across all segments [of retail banking].”

Mr Som said that even customers who had not been severely affected by the pandemic were opting for the support packages in a bid to conserve resources.

Mashreq’s business banking arm is also extending support to clients affected by the crisis, including some small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

Banks in the country are offering loan repayment holidays, lower interest rates and reduced fees and charges to clients to help soften Covid-19’s blow.

Retail loan customers placed on unpaid leave by their employers can approach lenders for payment holidays, with zero interest and fees.

Those with personal or car loans or mortgages can apply for a one-month repayment holiday with no fees. Other support measures include interest-free instalment plans on credit cards for all school fees, and repayment deferrals.

The support initiative from lenders comes after the UAE Central Bank’s Dh256bn stimulus package introduced in March.

This included a Dh50bn Targeted Economic Support Scheme of collateral­ised, interest-free loans offered to banks to extend to customers, as well as a loosening of requiremen­ts on capital and liquidity buffers that banks need to hold.

About 77 per cent of the initial Dh50bn made available has been drawn down by banks, and all financial institutio­ns are required to “consider the specific circumstan­ces of [affected] borrowers to receive a deferral of repayment within the Tess,” the regulator said.

The financial repercussi­ons of the pandemic on Mashreq are still unfolding.

Like its peers in the UAE, the lender is looking at a loss of income, partly as a result of the support provided to its customers.

Mr Som said there is an overall slowdown in business as customers opt not to remit a lot of money home, take out new loans or make new investment­s.

“I think there will be a drop in new business in the retail sector across our bank and [the wider banking] industry,” he said.

Mashreq’s retail business book accounted for 9 per cent of the bank’s total assets of Dh162.6 billion at the end of March and 26 per cent of its operating income of Dh1.52bn for the same period, according to its results.

The lender reported a 16.5 per cent year-on-year decline in net interest income during the quarter as the UAE Central Bank cut rates in line with the US Federal Reserve.

“End of the year, we will certainly see some decline and next year we will see a rise [in the retail book],” he said. “There’s so much uncertaint­y ... anything I say today will be out of context very soon.”

He declined to put a percentage on the potential drop.

Retail loan losses across the industry are also expected to rise this year, as the impact of job losses becomes more pronounced. The timetable of relief packages for customers, the state of employment and the momentum of the country’s economic recovery will determine the extent of loan losses, he said.

The biggest risk the retail lending space currently faces is unemployme­nt, with job losses expected in sectors such as aviation, retail, tourism and hospitalit­y, and small business.

Mr Som said he believes jobs losses will “be the single-biggest driver of our loan loss increase”.

Mashreq is cautious about extending personal finance solutions to people employed in the sectors most affected by Covid-19, which resulted in movement restrictio­ns and the closure of all non-essential businesses in late March and early April.

However, economic activity is gradually picking up after the government allowed malls, restaurant­s, cafes and other businesses to open, in accordance with strict guidelines.

The UAE has recorded 29,485 Covid-19 cases and 245 deaths, while 15,056 patients had recovered from the infection as of Sunday. Globally, coronaviru­s cases passed the 5.3 million mark, with more than 342,000 deaths and about 2.1 million recoveries, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Mr Som said Mashreq was “well under way” with a Dh500 million programme announced at the end of 2018 to digitise its operations, including its branch network, and could complete the work sooner than expected.

“I don’t think we need more money ... the project could finish early, quicker than five years. That is most likely to happen.”

Like its peers, Mashreq is looking at a loss of income, partly due to the support extended to customers

 ?? Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? A Mashreq branch in Dubai. The bank says unemployme­nt is the biggest risk to retail lending
Chris Whiteoak / The National A Mashreq branch in Dubai. The bank says unemployme­nt is the biggest risk to retail lending

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