The National - News

UAE’s Islamic finance sector on a strong growth path, Central Bank says

- BABU DAS AUGUSTINE

The Islamic finance sector in the UAE is on a strong growth trajectory and its role is key to achieving the sustainabi­lity goals of the country, its Central Bank has said.

The report came amid the UAE’s Year of Sustainabi­lity and its recent hosting of the Cop28 climate change summit.

It analyses the performanc­e of various Islamic finance sectors such as banking, insurance, or takaful, and capital markets that cover sukuk or Islamic bond issuances.

The Islamic banking sector accounted for 23 per cent of total banking assets within the UAE in 2022, equal to Dh845 billion ($231 billion), the banking regulator said in its UAE Islamic Finance Report 2023 report. Assets held by Islamic banks hit Dh631 billion, while Islamic windows – Islamic outlets in convention­al banks – held Dh214 billion, growing at 8 per cent and 49 per cent, respective­ly, from 2018.

Islamic windows now account for 25 per cent of total Islamic banking assets in the UAE, it said.

“The growth in Islamic banking assets in the UAE is supported by [the] strong funding conditions of Islamic banks and Islamic windows,” Khaled Balama, the Central Bank governor, said.

“Recent growth has also been driven by the economic activities of retail and corporate consumers despite the increases in benchmark rates.”

Last year, the UAE’s Islamic banking industry posted its highest growth in funding base since 2019, the report said. Deposits increased in parallel with financing, by 4 per cent in 2022, and account for 66 per cent of total liabilitie­s for Islamic banks, followed by Islamic capital market funding at 5 per cent, it said

Islamic banking growth in the UAE outpaced that of convention­al banks last year on the back of growing investor demand for Islamic products and deep distributi­on networks, according to Fitch Ratings.

Islamic banks expanded by 8 per cent in 2022, higher than convention­al banks, which grew by 3 per cent, the rating agency said in May.

The central bank report also noted a significan­t growth in takaful and sukuk issuances, other key components of Islamic finance, last year.

The UAE’s takaful sector landscape is being reshaped due to consolidat­ion, the regulator said. Out of the 62 insurance companies in the UAE in 2022, 10 are takaful operators.

The property sector was the largest takaful business line in 2022, contributi­ng 45 per cent to gross written contributi­ons, compared with 31 per cent in 2021, the report said.

The profits of takaful companies were affected by a drop in gross investment income last year, it said.

Takaful companies posted an overall loss of Dh14 million in 2022, compared with a profit of Dh93 million in 2021, largely due to a sharp decline in investment income.

“Gross investment income dropped 32 per cent in 2022, due mainly to a decrease in net unrealised gains on investment­s and weaker stock market performanc­e, while investment expense rose 32 per cent over the same period,” it said.

The UAE registered more active sukuk issuance in the first half of this year than in the whole of 2021 and 2022, the report said. Issuances stood at Dh28.7 billion in the first half of 2023, compared with Dh24.6 billion over the whole of 2022, it said.

The government of Sharjah issued the highest amount of sukuk over the past five years, followed by Dubai Islamic Bank and Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank. Collective­ly, these three entities accounted for 74 per cent of total sukuk issuances in the UAE.

“The UAE’s sukuk market is also expanding, and the introducti­on of local-currency Treasury sukuk by the federal government has the potential to encourage the issuance from other players in the market,” the Central Bank said.

The report also provides an overview of the legislativ­e, regulatory and Sharia governance landscape, in addition to an assessment of the sustainabi­lity strategies adopted by Islamic financial institutio­ns.

“Islamic banks play a crucial role in the developmen­t and provision of sustainabl­e finance and in meeting the sustainabi­lity objectives of the wider financial sector,” Mr Balama said.

Islamic banks play a crucial role in the developmen­t and provision of sustainabl­e finance

KHALED BALAMA Governor, the UAE Central Bank

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