UAE Lender NBAD Warns Over Falling Margins As It Posts Flat Profit
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UAE Lender NBAD Warns Over Falling Margins As It Posts Flat Profit

UAE Lender NBAD Warns Over Falling Margins As It Posts Flat Profit

NBAD’s chief executive said fierce competition combined with global interest rate pressure was starting to drive down the profitability of lending.

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National Bank of Abu Dhabi’s chief executive warned on Monday that falling margins were beginning to squeeze banks in the United Arab Emirates, after the country’s largest lender by market value reported flat first-quarter profit growth.

Many UAE banks have recorded impressive growth in the first quarter, continuing a trend from 2013 as the economy rebounds from a real estate crash and debt problems at Dubai government-linked entities.

However NBAD CEO Alex Thursby said fierce competition in the sector combined with global interest rate pressure was starting to drive down the profitability of lending, and would hit future earnings for the country’s banks.

NBAD made a net profit of Dhs1.41 billion ($383.9 million), unchanged from the first quarter last year, but well above the Dhs1.20 billion average forecast of analysts polled by Reuters.

Despite the lack of growth, Thursby said he was happy with the results as the bank was continuing a strategy to move away from the lending-focused business model of many of its local peers to one which relies more on fee income from areas such as advisory, considered less vulnerable to margin pressures.

The bank’s net interest margin – the difference between the rate it pays out on deposits and the rate it charges for lending – had dropped to 1.84 per cent at the end of March, from 1.98 per cent at the end of 2013.

“There is no question we’re starting to see margin compression,” Thursby told reporters on a results call.

“It’s been my belief since I arrived in July that margin compression would unfold and it’s done so quicker than expected. Over the last 18 months, we’ve seen this spread through the entity Asia and now it’s in the Middle East.”

The CEO said the strong growth in deposits which the bank registered in the first quarter – up by 11.3 per cent on the end of December due to inflows from government-related entities – was compounding the problem as this forced the bank to park the cash in low-yielding assets like U.S. Treasuries.

The pressure has been noted by other lenders – Emirates NBD’s chief financial officer Surya Subramanian said on Thursday the bank was retaining its guidance on net interest margins for 2014 at between 2.5 and 2.6 per cent due to the expected competition in the sector; it stood at 2.75 per cent after the first quarter, stable from the previous quarter.

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Thursby said the pressure on margins was showing the importance of his bank’s strategy to diversify its business and earn more income from advising and less from lending.

Total non-interest income – the area NBAD is looking to expand – was down 4.4 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter as a big jump in earnings from fees and commissions was offset by lower revenues from foreign exchange, investments and other income.

A small rise in net interest income made up the difference, with overall operating income flat on the same period of 2013.

Loans and advances dropped 2.9 per cent compared to the end of December, due to several large repayments and maturities in the first quarter of the year.

For the rest of the year, NBAD would target lending growth in the retail and commercial sectors, with wholesale lending expected to be flat as the bank used it more as an initial tool to gain fee-paying business with customers.


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