Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Business Banking & Insurance

UAE banks to benefit from public-sector loan growth in 2020

Large banks have sizeable share of foreign exchange and credit card related income



Emirates NBD Bank in Bur Dubai. Profitability at the four largest UAE banks is set to remain resilient in 2020, as solid public-sector loan growth balances the effects of competition and subdued private-sector credit demand.
Image Credit: Arshad Ali/Gulf News

Dubai: Profitability at the four largest UAE banks is set to remain resilient in 2020, as solid public-sector loan growth balances the effects of competition and subdued private-sector credit demand, Moody’s Investors Service said in a report published Tuesday.

The combined net profit of First Abu Dhabi Bank, Emirates NBD, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank and Dubai Islamic Bank rose 13 per cent to Dh37 billion ($10.1 billion) in 2019. The four banks accounted for 73 per cent of banking assets in the UAE as of December.

Excluding ENBD’s one-off gain related to the partial disposal of a stake in Network International and fair value gain on retained interest, the four banks’ net profit fell 1 per cent.

“We expect the banks’ profitability to remain resilient in 2020, with a net income to tangible assets ratio at around 1.8 per cent,” said Mik Kabeya, AVP-Analyst at Moody’s. “Non-interest income accounted for 30 per cent of operating income in 2019 and will remain solid, given the sizeable portion of relatively resilient foreign exchange and credit card related income.”

Interest income

Net interest income of these four banks increased materially in 2019, driven by loan book growth. A strong increase in public sector lending combined with acquisitions led to a 13 per cent rise in credit growth, which outweighed a compression in net interest margins during the second half of the year. The combined net interest income of the four banks rose 6 per cent during 2019.

Advertisement

The banks’ technology investment and integration spending this year will be moderated by disciplined cost management, according to the report. Provisioning charges will increase noticeably as OPEC production cuts constrain hydrocarbon economic growth, while slowing global trade, moderate oil prices, strong currency and geopolitical tensions weigh on the non-hydrocarbon economy.

Advertisement