1.53 AM Wednesday, 17 April 2024
  • City Fajr Shuruq Duhr Asr Magrib Isha
  • Dubai 04:35 05:51 12:21 15:49 18:46 20:03
17 April 2024

Arab banks to perform well in 2013

Published

Arab banks have become immune to financial crises that have swept Europe and other countries as most of their assets are in US dollar and are expected to perform even better in 2013, according to a top Arab banker.

Although most major economies have recovered from those crises, the year 2013 will be a challenging economically and financially, where the difficulties of the economic situations in the United States and the Euro Zone remain overshadowing the global economy, said Adnan Yousuf, chairman of the Beirut-based Union of Arab Banks (UAB), which groups most banks in the Arab countries.

However, all indications point to the fact that this economy will enter a new stage, especially during the second half of next year, he said.

Citing international projections, he said global economic growth was expected to have recorded 3.1 percent in 2012 and could be around 3.4 percent in 2013.

The IMF expects the non-oil Arab countries to achieve a growth by two percent in 2102, to rise between 3.6 and 4 percent on average in 2013. As for Arab Gulf oil states, they are expected to register an average growth rate of 6 percent in 2013.

“Amid this global economic outlook, the UAB database shows that Arab banks, despite what’s happening regionally and internationally, are generally still safe from all these developments, and have not been significantly affected as other economic sectors,” Yousuf said in an article published by UAB’s December magazine.

“Most of the Arab banking sectors have adapted to the evolving conditions, or even started to go beyond its implications, as they retain excellent capitalization ratios, and a very good level of liquidity where the majority of the Arab banks have adjusted its lending growth rates…..despite the decline in profits from a number of Arab banks, these banks still achieve good profitability ratios.”

He noted that Arab banks achieved good growth rates during the first nine months of 2012 compared to the end of the year 2011, where UAE banks’ assets grew by 6.1 per cent while there was growth of 6.8 per cent in Saudi banks, 9.9 per cent in Oman, 13.1 per cent in Qatar and between three and seven per cent in other Arab banks.

“In addition to these reassuring indicators, expectations of higher assets and profitability of Arab banks in 2013 are based on the high volume of funding expected to be offered by banks to governments in order to implement major projects and those related to infrastructure, as well as trade finance, which is recovering as a result of the increasing volume of trade exchange between Arab countries on the one hand and between and between Asia and Latin America on the other.”

Yousuf said Arab banks have resorted to hedge funding over the past years due to the aggravated implications of sovereign debt and US crises, where many of them, especially Gulf banks sharply raised their capital.

“This is in addition to the fact that most Arab banks deal in dollars, where their exposure to the Euro is around 15 percent compared to 85 percent in the US dollar,” he said.

“Another aspect is that Arab banks play an important economic and development role, which is regarded as the primary and main funding tool for Arab economies and economic, investment, development and corporate projects and even the consumption sector in the overall Arab countries.”