Gulf Times - Gulf Times Business

UAE central bank now free to link banks’ real estate exposure to market strength, says senior banker

-

The United Arab Emirates’ central bank now has the flexibilit­y to set new exposure limits for banks to the real estate sector and can amend these to reflect market performanc­e, a senior commercial banker said yesterday A new law introduced last month abolished a cap, dating from 1980, that restricted each bank’s lending to the constructi­on and real estate sectors to a maximum of 20% of total deposits. No new cap has been imposed, but Abdulaziz alGhurair, chairman of the UAE Banks Federation, said his federation has liaised with the central bank on what should be defined as real estate, suggesting a new cap could be looming.

“Flexibilit­y is now with the central bank and it may come back and change [the cap situation] from year to year depending on the performanc­e of real estate,” said al-Ghurair, on the sidelines of a conference. “Now that [the cap] is lifted the central bank may say 10%, or 20% or 30% overnight.”

The former cap did little to protect banks from being badly burned by the rise in mortgage defaults and other bad loans during the UAE’s property market crash in the wake of the global financial crisis of 2009. Almost a decade later, banks are again feeling the impact of a sluggish property market, although not as severely, as many have cut back exposure and price declines are less steep.

Dubai and Abu Dhabi posted falls in residentia­l prices of 6.5% and 6.9% in the second quarter from a year earlier, among the steepest declines for cities anywhere in the world, according to Knight Frank’s Global Residentia­l Cities Index.

Banks have provided the UAE central bank with recommenda­tions on what should be defined as real estate under any new restrictio­ns, al-Ghurair told reporters.

The regulator will then decide what limits should be introduced, he said.

In other rules relating to the real estate market, the federation is considerin­g whether to ask the central bank to relax mortgage lending rules to stimulate a fragile market, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters in September.

At the moment, first-time buyers of a home worth up to 5mn dirhams ($1.4mn) can only borrow up to 80% of the property value if they are UAE citizens, while the cap is 75% for foreigners.

There have been discussion­s on potentiall­y changing the ratio, but no changes had been confirmed, alGhurair said without elaboratin­g.

“The existing ratio is a good ratio,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar