Banking

Net Profits of GCC Banks Register 40% Growth in 2021

The total net profits of the GCC banks soared to reach $35 billion, recording a growth of 40% in 2021 compared with $25 billion in 2020.

This rising profits of the GCC banks in 2021 was due to an increase in total bank revenues as well as a decline in loan loss provisions, The Kuwait-based Kamco Invest said in a report. However, GCC banks’ profits remained below pre-pandemic profits of $37 billion reported in 2019, the report said.

The y-o-y increase in 2021 was broad-based across the GCC with profits for Kuwaiti banks almost doubled to %2.9 billion. The Saudi and UAE-listed banks also reported healthy profit growth of 40.2% and 52.6% during the year. Higher profits also pushed the aggregate return on equity for the sector to a 7-quarter high level of 10.4% at the end of 2021 as compared to 9.6% in Q3 of 2021 and 8.1% at the end of 2020.

The growth in profits during the year was led by an increase in total bank revenue as well as a decline in loan loss provisions. Total bank revenue increased by 6.9% to reach $90 billion during 2021, one of the highest on record mainly led by a growth of 17.6% in non-interest income further supported by a relatively smaller growth of 2.3% in net interest income.

Revenue growth was broad-based across the GCC with Qatari banks reporting the biggest growth of 9.9% followed by UAE and Kuwaiti bank revenue growth of 9.0% and 7.1%, respectively. UAE-listed banks reported the biggest growth in non-interest income at 31.7% but was the only market to report a drop in interest income during the year by 3.2%.

Loan loss provisions (LLPs) reported by GCC banks declined by more than a quarter in 2021 to reach $14.9 Billion as against $20.4 billion in 2020. However, these LLPs remained elevated as compared to pre-pandemic levels with an average LLP of $9.1 billion for the 10 years preceding the pandemic (2010-2019). The decline in LLP during 2021 was seen across the GCC barring Qatar, which reported an increase of 20.1% or $600 million to report provisions of $3.4 billion, the second biggest provision booked during the year after UAE-listed banks.

Quarterly Trends

In terms of quarterly trend, growth in lending decelerated during Q4 of 2021 to a three quarter-low gross loan growth of 1.2% to reach $1.7 trillion. The subdued growth came after strong lending growth recorded by banks in Kuwait (+3.7%) and Saudi Arabia (+2.8%) were partially offset by below 1% growth in UAE, Bahrain and Oman and a decline of 0.6% reported by Qatari banks during the quarter.

Customer deposits also showed a similar trend during Q4 of 2021 with a growth of 1.2%, also a three-quarter low, to reach $2 trillion. As a result, the loan-to-deposit ratio for the aggregate GCC banking sector declined marginally by 10 bps to reach a five-quarter low level of 79.9%.

Global Business Magazine

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