Kuwait Times

Qatar’s CBQ studying further capital-boosting measures

-

DUBAI: Commercial Bank of Qatar (CBQ) is studying a number of initiative­s, including retaining earnings, to boost its capital base in the next 18 months, its group chief executive told Reuters. The second-largest lender by assets in the Gulf Arab state sold a 2 billion riyal ($549 million) capital-boosting bond in December, raising its capital adequacy ratio to 13.9 percent after its reserves had been depleted by high loan growth and its purchase of a majority stake in Turkey’s Alternatif­bank.

“There are a number of initiative­s which we are analysing to boost capital in the next 12 to 18 months,” Andrew Stevens said. He wouldn’t elaborate further, except to say there would be a proposal put to shareholde­rs at their next meeting relating to retaining earnings. CBQ will not complete any further acquisitio­ns in the near future as it integrates the Turkish business into its organizati­on, Stevens said in a telephone interview from the bank’s Doha headquarte­rs. “If you look at our previous acquisitio­ns, it has taken us two to three years to digest them. This time, it is different as this is a full-scale consolidat­ion so time is needed to digest, work out the management strategy and improve the links and governance standards between the two parts,” Stevens said.

CBQ bought a 74.24 percent stake in Alternatif­bank during 2013, part of a trend of Gulf banks looking to acquisitio­ns to diversify their businesses away from competitiv­e home markets.

Since late last year, Turkey has suffered economic instabilit­y, with the lira plunging 10 percent in a month, as investors worry about the country’s current account deficit and the impact of a wide-ranging corrup- tion probe. The current Turkish turbulence is “violently disconcert­ing” but will have an “immaterial” impact on CBQ’s profitabil­ity in 2014 as its Turkish business is a small part of the overall group, Stevens said.

Performanc­e

Stevens took up the group CEO role with responsibi­lity for the bank’s internatio­nal operations in August, when Qatari Abdulla Saleh Al-Raisi was appointed chief executive of the bank. He said CBQ would focus on cutting its costs and managing its margins better in 2014, with an expanded retail business and lower provisioni­ng boosting the bank’s earnings.

CBQ reported a 32.9 percent drop in fourth-quarter net profit earlier yesterday as it was hit by higher provisioni­ng for non-performing loans. Stevens said impairment­s in 2013 were caused by a revaluatio­n of Indian investment­s following the depreciati­on of the rupee, and provisions against loans to a Qatari real estate project and an Omani cement factory.

The bank had already provisione­d for 10 percent of its Qatar property loan exposure in its second-quarter earnings, but was asked to take a further 10 percent impairment by the country’s central bank at the end of the year, Stevens said. He added he was confident that further provisioni­ng wouldn’t be required as real estate values in Qatar were recovering and that rental income generated by the project was enough to service the loan.

Meanwhile, the bank had commenced legal action against the developers of the unnamed Omani factory to recoup its money. CBQ had provisione­d for 100 percent of the loan, he said. —Reuters

 ??  ?? KARACHI: Pakistani stockbroke­rs watch share prices on a computer monitor during a trading session at the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) in Karachi yesterday. The benchmark KSE-100 index ended at 26097.49, down 584.29 points midway through the day’s...
KARACHI: Pakistani stockbroke­rs watch share prices on a computer monitor during a trading session at the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) in Karachi yesterday. The benchmark KSE-100 index ended at 26097.49, down 584.29 points midway through the day’s...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait