The United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) central bank announced new measures to guarantee liquidity in the banking system in the face of the new coronavirus outbreak.
The country is boosting its stimulus to a total of $70 billion from a previously announced $27 billion package.
As of Saturday, the UAE registered a total of 1,505 cases of people infected.
The outbreak has led the government to carry out incremental social and business restrictions that are hitting hard vital economic sectors such as retail and tourism.
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The central bank said on Sunday the aggregate value of all capital and liquidity measures it adopted since March 14 is 256 billion dirhams ($69.70 billion).
On March 14, it launched 100 billion dirhams ($27 billion) worth of measures.
“The UAE central bank has upped the ante against the financial impact of the coronavirus by introducing a new set of liquidity-boosting and capital preservation measures,’’ said Shabbir Malik, a banking analyst at EFG Hermes.
“It will help ease liquidity pressures, which had built up recently.’’
The Emirates Interbank Offered Rates (EIBOR), used in many UAE financial transactions, have shot up in the second half of March, Refinitiv data showed, suggesting tighter liquidity.
Bankers told Reuters last week that banks are limiting their lending to minimise potential losses from the coronavirus crisis and from an expected squeeze in dollar liquidity due to lower oil prices.
A Dubai-based banking source said on Sunday that while the new UAE central bank measures encouraged banks to lend more, they did not compel them to do so.
The measures will probably free up liquidity for potential bail-outs of state-owned companies, rather than targeting smaller business, the source said.
The central bank’s governor, Abdulhamid Saeed, who was appointed last week, said the additional measures “will effectively relieve the pressure on financial institutions.
“The measures will also allow them to continue to carry out their crucial role as the backbone of the economy while offering the required relief and continued access to funding for businesses and households’’.
The UAE regulator said on Sunday it has halved banks’ reserve requirements for demand deposits to seven per cent from 14 per cent, which will inject about 61 billion dirhams of liquidity to support banks’ lending and liquidity management.
It extended the duration of a previously announced deferral of loan principal and interest payments for customers until the end of the year.
It also said banks, participating in the scheme, could benefit from a capital buffer relief until December 2021.
The value of the capital buffer relief is 50 billion dirhams.
Banks are allowed a “zero-cost funding facility” against collateral until the end of this year – a programme also worth 50 billion dirhams.
Overall measures aimed at relaxing banks’ liquidity buffer requirements were estimated at 95 billion dirhams, the regulator said.
It also postponed the planned implementation of certain Basel III capital standards “to minimise the operational burden on the financial industry during this challenging period’’.