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BANKING ASSETS IN UAE TO GROW UP TO 10% NEXT YEAR

Lenders have received $68.07bn in assistance from the Central Bank

- SARMAD KHAN

The UAE’s banking assets are expected to grow by 8 per cent to 10 per cent in 2022 as the economy continues to recover from the pandemic-driven slowdown and reap the benefits of hosting Expo 2020 Dubai, according to the chairman of UAE Banks Federation.

The economic rebound was in large part driven by the Dh400 billion ($108.91bn) monetary and fiscal support by the UAE government.

This includes the Central Bank’s relief package of more than Dh250bn for lenders in the country since the onset of the pandemic, Abdulaziz Al Ghurair told a media briefing in Dubai yesterday.

These measures have played a “positive role” and have “taken us from what could have been a disaster to a manageable outcome”, he said.

“Looking forward to next year, I expect our banking [asset] growth to be around 8 per cent [to 10 per cent], which is very decent growth when we see other economies still struggling,” Mr Al Ghurair said.

He expects overall lending growth in the UAE to also reach 8 per cent to 10 per cent next year, driven by continued economic momentum. Demand for loans rose in the lead-up to Expo 2020 Dubai and is expected to continue to grow in the coming months.

The UAE economy, which contracted 6.1 per cent in 2020 on the back of the global economic slowdown, has bounced back strongly, boosted by fiscal and monetary support and other government measures.

The stimulus announced by the CBUAE included a Dh100bn package and consisted a direct Dh50bn injection of funds through zero-cost collateral­ised loans provided by the Central Bank. This has helped the banks in managing liquidity during the crisis.

Although the CBUAE in September said that it will start a “gradual and well-calibrated withdrawal” of Tess, parts of which have been extended to July 2022, about “95 per cent of banks have surrendere­d Tess because they no longer need it”, Mr Al Ghurair said.

It is an indication of the economic recovery, as customers are “out of trouble and they don’t need support”.

“It’s a very good sign when the banks voluntaril­y give up support,” Mr Al Ghurair said. “I don’t think we need any support from the Central Bank. The government and the country has done enough to support various parts of the economy.”

Mr Al Ghurair, who heads the body representi­ng 53 lenders in the country, said it is time for the UAE banks to move on from the support phase and look at “the new businesses we want to concentrat­e on”.

In terms of asset quality of lenders, UBF chairman said banks have been prudent and took provisions last year and booked additional charges for expected loan losses in 2021. The non-performing loans ratio this year is expected to hit about 8 per cent, however, “2022 will be a good year and we will go back to normal” pre-pandemic NPL ratios of about 2 per cent.

“Of course, during the crisis you expect asset deteriorat­ion … [but] hopefully, the bulk of it is all behind us,” he said.

But despite pressure on asset quality, capital adequacy ratios of lenders in the country and their cost-to-income ratios, as well as their profitabil­ity is still strong.

The banking regulator in the UAE is also in discussion­s about the replacemen­t of the Emirates Interbank Offered Rate (Eibor) – the benchmark interest rate for lending between banks within the UAE – with a new system that is likely to be implemente­d “some time next year”, Mr Al Ghurair said.

“Eibor is in discussion for replacemen­t,” he said. “The Central Bank has initiated a discussion and a consultant has been engaged and a mechanism is being discussed.”

The CBUAE has already discussed the matter with UBF’s capital market’s committee and “now we are just waiting for the right time to launch the replacemen­t … we don’t want to shock the system and we want to find the right time of launching”.

There are no winners or losers in the new system, which will be “a fair, transparen­t pricing mechanism”, Mr Al Ghurair said.

The UAE’s economy is forecast to grow 2.1 per cent this year, driven by pandemic-mitigation measures, according to the CBUAE’s second-quarter review. The economy is expected to grow at 4.2 per cent in 2022, higher than the 3.8 per cent previously forecast.

Mr Al Ghurair expects the gross domestic product to grow by around 5 per cent next year.

“The Expo opening was a plus for the country. It took nine years in the works to bring Expo to the UAE and I think [the] UAE will benefit from the expo for the next nine years to come,” he said.

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