United Arab Emirates’ banks, struggling with bad loans after Dubai teetered on the brink of default in 2009, are seeing profit margins shrink as lending slows and falling interest rates curb gains on investments.
The net interest margin, the difference between what banks earn from loans and what they pay on liabilities such as customer deposits, has dropped for the top five U.A.E. lenders this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The measure at Emirates NBD PJSC (EMIRATES), the U.A.E.’s biggest bank by assets, slipped to 2.35 percent in the third quarter, from 2.85 percent at the end of the year. Second-ranked National Bank of Abu Dhabi PJSC posted a decline to 2.16 percent, from 2.4 percent.
Bank lending in the U.A.E., the second-biggest Arab economy, has risen 3.2 percent in August from a year ago, about a fifth of the rate in Saudi Arabia and a 10th of that in Qatar, according to central bank data. U.A.E. banks are also setting aside more cash to meet new liquidity rules from January and are earning less on that cash as interest rates decline.
No comments:
Post a Comment