Saturday, 1 May 2021

What Q1 financial results of top four banks say about #UAE’s banking sector? | Banking – Gulf News

What Q1 financial results of top four banks say about UAE’s banking sector? | Banking – Gulf News

Most of the leading banks in the UAE have declared their first quarter 2021results pointing to improving operating conditions.

While year on year profit gains have been modest at best for most banks, they have made significant gains over the previous quarter and other preceding quarters.

Clearly, the Q1 numbers are pointing to improvement in the economic conditions leading to improved non-interest incomes, gains in cost savings and significant reduction in loan loss provisions supporting profitability.

Although the first quarter numbers indicate a small improvement in loan growth, interest incomes continued to be under stress due to the low interest rate environment, somewhat offset by savings from lower cost of funds.

Big four

First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB), the UAE’s largest bank, reported a Q1 group net profit of Dh 2.5 billion, up 3 per cent year on year.

While the bank made significant gains from 36 per cent lower provisions year on year, operating expenses were reduced by 3 per cent as the group maintained strong cost discipline and gains. At the close of the quarter non-performing loans (NPL) ratio was at 4 per cent, provision coverage at 96 per cent.

“FAB's strong foundations and competitive strengths continue to support the bank's ability to achieve a resilient performance in a challenging quarter characterised by a slower than expected recovery in business activity,” said Hana Al Rostamani, Group Chief Executive Officer of FAB.

Clearly improving economic conditions and adequate provision buffers have been a common factor for all the four top banks.

Emirates NBD’s Q1 net profit improved 12 per cent year on year and 76 per cent quarter on quarter to Dh2.3 billion

Clearly, the bank’s lower impairment allowances reduced by 31 per cent following proactive provisioning in previous quarters. Additionally, operating expenses in the Q1 at Dh1.86 billion was down 9 per cent, largely driven by cost saving measures introduced in the aftermath of COVID crisis.

“Emirates NBD’s increase of Q1-21 reflects the resilience and gradual economic recovery following the global disruption in 2020,” said Hesham Abdulla Al Qassim, Vice-Chairman and Managing Director.

The bank also made gains in net interest margin (2.46%) with lower cost of funding from strong current and savings account (CASA) growth.

ADCB’s improved results reflected a host of factors, primarily the prudent provisioning the bank made last year following impairments linked to the NMC Healthcare Group and associate companies.

The bank made a clear turnaround a net profit of Dh1.12 billion for the first quarter of 2021, up 436 per cent year on year and 11 per cent sequentially (quarter on quarter).

“ADCB had a strong start to 2021. The institutional strength has underpinned the resilience of our consumer and wholesale banking businesses. Merger synergies, acceleration of digital transformation and additional cost initiatives have resulted in greater efficiency across our operations,’ said Ala’a Eraiqat, Group Chief Executive Officer.

While the most visible component of improved results was the 20 per cent decline in operating expenses year on year cost synergies from the merger too was a key supporting factor

Although the bank continued to take high impairment charges of Dh704 million in Q1 2021 it was down 63 per cent lower year on year.

Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB) too made significant gains in Q1 largely driven by lower impairment charges and cost savings.

Operating expenses declined to Dh612 million compared to Dh839 million in the same period of last year, an improvement of over 27 per cent. Impairment charges were lower at Dh751 million, reflecting the bank’s prudent approach to underwriting risks.

Cautious outlook

Overall, faced with the challenging economic environment, the top four banks experienced more than 75 per cent increase in provisions last year. Prudent advanced provisioning last year has seen a sharp decline in the first quarter of 2021. However, the extension of the Central Bank of UAE’s Targeted Economic Support Scheme (TESS) is likely to mask and or postpone the recognition of some of the problem loans that could be visible only early next year.

While slow loan growth and low interest rate environment is expected to keep interest margins under pressure, improving cost efficiencies are likely to have minimal material impact on overall profits as operating income growth is lower the rate of decline in operating expenses keeping the cost to income ratios elevated.

#Dubai Plans New Park for Food Firms in Vertical Farming Push - Bloomberg

Dubai Plans New Park for Food Firms in Vertical Farming Push - Bloomberg

Dubai will build a new business park to host specialized agricultural firms as the Middle East’s business hub pushes for food security.

The first phase of the project, dubbed “Food Tech Valley,” will include headquarters, research and development facilities, innovation center, smart food logistics hub and areas for vertical farming, according to a tweet by Dubai’s ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid.

Dubai, a desert city that needs to import nearly all its food, has been seeking to secure food supplies along with other sheikdoms in the United Arab Emirates federation. A global surge in food prices and the disruption to supply chains caused by the pandemic pushed the country to accelerate plans to grow more crops and farm more livestock. The oil-rich UAE currently imports about 90% of its food needs.

“The UAE’s food trade exceeds 100 billion ($27 billion) annually,” the Dubai’s ruler, who’s also prime minister of the UAE, said in the tweet. “Our country is a global food logistics hub, and we will work to create a nurturing environment for agribusinesses to develop new farming technologies and enhance our future food security.”

Oil Posts April Gain With Focus on Upcoming Demand Revival - Bloomberg

Oil Posts April Gain With Focus on Upcoming Demand Revival - Bloomberg
PRICES
  • West Texas Intermediate fell $1.43 to settle at $63.58 a barrel, but rose 2.3% this week
  • Brent for June settlement, which expires Friday, lost $1.31 to $67.25 a barrel. The contract is up 1.7% this week, and climbed 5.8% for the month
    • The more-active July contract declined $1.29 to $66.76
Oil rose this month with a slew of positive economic data and signs of a budding fuel consumption revival in key economies offsetting a worsening coronavirus crisis elsewhere.

Futures in New York rose this week, extending its monthly gain to 7.5%. The near-certain likelihood of higher fuel consumption in the U.S., China and the U.K has brightened the overall demand outlook, even as a resurgent pandemic in countries such as India, Brazil and Japan cloud those prospects. OPEC and its allies see world consumption rebounding by 6 million barrels a day this year, while Goldman Sachs Group Inc. this week said demand could post a record jump as vaccination rates increase.

“The U.S. is going to lead the demand recovery” and “now that Covid cases are declining across most of western Europe, there’s excitement around a strong pickup in global economic activity and improved air travel in the coming months,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda Corp. But “to take out the March highs, the situation in India needs to be heading in the right direction.”


#Saudi foreign reserves rose 1.7% in March to $449bln | ZAWYA MENA Edition

Saudi foreign reserves rose 1.7% in March to $449bln | ZAWYA MENA Edition

Saudi Arabia’s foreign reserves increased by 1.7 percent month over month in March to SR1.683 trillion ($448.9 billion), according to data from the country’s central bank, the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority.

Reserves were 5 percent lower from a year earlier, SAMA said.

Investments in foreign securities edged up 0.2 percent month over month to SR1.124 trillion, while foreign exchange and deposits abroad rose 5.7 percent to SR513.6 billion.

The reserve position at the IMF decreased by 3.6 percent month over month to SR12.99 billion, while special drawing rights fell 2 percent to SR30.97 billion and gold was SR1.62 billion.

Deepest Backwardation Since ‘07 Shows World Short on Commodities - Bloomberg

Deepest Backwardation Since ‘07 Shows World Short on Commodities - Bloomberg

For an idea of exactly how strong the fundamentals are for commodities such as metals, agriculture and oil today, consider this: These markets are now showing the steepest backwardation in more than 14 years.

That is, the premium for commodities that can be delivered now versus later into the future is the highest it has been since at least 2007, signaling just how strong the world’s demand is for raw materials and how tight supplies are.



In commodities markets, futures are frequently pricier at longer maturities because they reflect the cost of carrying inventories over time as well as future demand expectations. But urgent demand has flipped about half of major commodity markets tracked by the Bloomberg Commodity Index including oil, natural gas, copper, soybeans into backwardation.

Prices for everything from copper to oil have sky-rocketed as the largest economies rebound from the pandemic amid massive government stimulus spending. Manufacturing and building are picking up, and more people are driving their cars and booking airline tickets as they get vaccinated. China is buying record amounts of corn, and agricultural grains have gotten so expensive it’s upending global trade flows.