Banks in the United Arab Emirates are facing a liquidity shortfall of up to $11 billion and are suffering from bad debt due to unsecured lending, a Standard Chartered (STAN.L) executive said on Tuesday.
Shayne Nelson, the bank's chief executive in the Middle East, told a conference the country's lenders were coping with a liquidity shortfall of 30-40 billion dirhams ($8.2-$10.9 billion).
"Liquidity is still short. It's 30-40 billion dirhams short. (This is) the difference between advances and deposits. Straight math," Nelson said, adding access to capital was improving for the larger banks.
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