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Oil prices, interest rates to boost banks’ profitability in Saudi, UAE

Saudi, UAE banking sectors face contrasting liquidity dynamics
Oil prices, interest rates to boost banks’ profitability in Saudi, UAE
Bankers

Higher oil prices and rising interest rates are expected to lead to strengthening profitability for Saudi and UAE banks in 2022–2023, according to the credit rating agency Fitch. 

The agency calculated that a 200bp increase in interest rates would boost Fitch-rated Saudi banks’ operating profit by 14 percent, and their operating profit/risk-weighted assets ratio (our core profitability metric) by 50bp, on average, based on the banks’ 2021 interest-rate sensitivities. For Fitch-rated UAE banks, the respective figures are 11 percent and 40bp.

For Fitch-rated UAE banks, the respective figures are 11 percent and 40bp.

The Saudi and UAE banking sectors face contrasting liquidity dynamics, Fitch Ratings says in a new report. The agency expected Saudi banks’ funding costs will ease due to 50 billion riyals of liquidity injections from the Central Bank of Saudi Arabia in June 2022, with more likely to follow to support strong loan growth. UAE liquidity conditions are more supportive, helped by modest loan growth. 

The average net interest margin (NIM) for Fitch-rated UAE banks contracted by 50bp during the last monetary tightening cycle in 2015–2018, due to tight liquidity conditions. However, liquidity conditions are considerably more favorable this time, underpinned by the higher oil prices, and Fitch, therefore, expected UAE banks’ NIMs to widen in 2022–2023.

UAE banks’ higher proportion of variable-rate mortgages means they can reprice loans faster than Saudi banks when interest rates rise. Partly offsetting this relative disadvantage, Saudi banks have a higher proportion of low-cost current account or savings account (CASA) deposits, which will not require, according to Fitch, significant increases to the interest rates paid to customers. 

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