Saudi Arabia : Uncertainty About Bank Credit Growth

 | Dec 24, 2014 04:46AM ET

Credit growth has been moderate in the Gulf for five years. The trend looks less closely tied to the oil cycle than previously, but the current oil price fall will affect available bank liquidity. Slowing lending growth could reduce non-oil sector growth. In the Gulf, monetary policy tools have limited effectiveness in terms of supporting lending. Banks have some surplus liquidity that can be mobilised, particularly in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Saudi Arabia. Beyond that, governments’ financial ability to support the economy will be decisive.

■ Moderate bank credit recovery since 2011
The 2009 economic and financial crisis brought a step change in bank lending growth in the GCC countries. Although the Gulf economies were relatively unaffected by the financial turbulence, private sector lending growth was weak in 2009 and 2010 (averaging 2% and 4.8% respectively, compared with 15% for all emerging markets ex China). Since then, the pace of growth has remained moderate, averaging 10% between 2011 and 2013 (9% for emerging markets ex China), and 14% to the end of September 2014. Given moderate inflation, real growth of credit remains consistent with economic activity. Looking only at non-oil sector activity (the oil sector makes relatively little use of domestic credit), the gap between real growth in lending and in the non-oil economy rises gradually, but remains moderate, suggesting no overheating in banking activity. The gap was negative in 2009 and 2010 (-3.8% and -3.0% respectively), but was estimated at 5.8% at the end of September 2014. This is far from the gaps of more than 10% in 2007-2008. In addition to the pace of lending growth, a disconnection is worth highlighting between the trend in oil export revenue and private sector lending since 2009. This link is natural in such an oil-rent economy due to the reinjection of some of the petrodollars into the economy through public spending. Since 2009, the increase in private sector lending (averaging 9%) has been much lower than the increase in oil revenue (averaging 22%).

There are a number of possible reasons which explain this moderate lending growth given the growth in oil revenue. The cleaning up of bank balance sheets, particularly since the real estate debt crisis in Dubai, has held back banking activity in the UAE. Similarly, the difficulties at investment houses in Kuwait may have restrained lending there. In connection with these events, tighter regulations have been introduced, aimed at combatting property speculation. However, while there may have been a gradual trend to autonomy in the non-oil sectors relative to changes in oil income, we believe that the oil cycle will continue to be key to economic activity in the GCC states.

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■ Oil price fall
The oil price fall since September 2014 has not so far had any effect on bank liquidity. Interbank rates have been stable in all Gulf states and have continued to decline despite the more than 30% oil price fall. For example, the Saudi interbank rate has fallen by about 7 bp over the last three months. Bank funding mainly comes from local deposits with only a quite marginal proportion coming from capital markets. Public sector deposits are also quite large (averaging more than 15% of total deposits) and form a source of government support for the banking sector. It is likely that the rate of growth in deposits will slow with the fall in oil revenue. A slowing rise in central bank external assets automatically affects money supply growth. The expected slowdown in public spending growth (decline in certain budget items, delay in investment projects) will have a negative effect on bank lending growth.