UAE banks told to extend loan maturities for citizens

The United Arab Emirates' central bank has told lenders to extend maturities on certain personal loans held by UAE citizens by more than four years, the latest initiative aimed at reducing their debt burdens.
August 16, 2012 3:57 by Reuters
The United Arab Emirates’ central bank has told lenders to extend maturities on certain personal loans held by UAE citizens by more than four years, the latest initiative aimed at reducing their debt burdens.
In a circular sent to banks earlier this week, the regulator told banks to reschedule citizens’ loans by more than 48 months if the repayment exceeds 50 percent of gross salary and other income.
The loans can be rescheduled provided no fresh money is borrowed, the circular added.
Banks were also told to segregate personal loans used to buy real estate, with the borrower’s consent, and set them up as separate loans. Payments on those should also not exceed 50 percent of the total salary.
The UAE has taken a raft of steps to help citizens carrying high debt burdens. In May, it announced plans to settle defaulted loans owed by its citizens – up to $1.36 million each – after a presidential decree, in the second such move this year.
UAE citizens took out massive personal loans during the boom years between 2003 to 2008 but found themselves struggling to repay debt after the global financial crisis and property downturn across much of the country.
The central bank has brought in new regulations on personal lending by banks in the UAE, fuelled by concerns over the debts individuals were taking on.
In May 2011, the central bank capped personal borrowing at 20-times an individual’s monthly salary, with monthly repayments also capped at 50 percent of an individual’s salary and regular income. Personal loans could have a maximum tenor of four years.
This year, it also capped the interest rate banks charge on credit cards at 18 percent annually. Banks in the UAE previously charged between 27 percent and 36 percent a year, much higher than many other Gulf Arab states.
($1 = 3.6730 UAE dirhams)
(Reporting By Stanley Carvalho, Editing by David French and Amran Abocar)
More on All News
-
Iranians Face New Internet Curbs
-
Bahrain’s Batelco CEO leaves with immediate effect
-
Morocco To Launch 4G Mobile License Tenders
-
Arabtec Says Workers End Strike
-
Kuwaiti Oil Service Workers On Strike Over Pay – Union
-
Qatar’s Doha Bank May Sell Bonds To Raise Capital – CEO
-
Qatar to announce new energy infrastructure fund
-
Qatar Holding, Italy Fund Eying Versace – Paper
-
Tesco Clothing Brand Plans International Expansion
-
Saudi government websites targeted
-
NCoV – First report of patient-to-nurse spread
-
Struggling Singapore Airlines fights back
-
Saudi regulations target stock market speculators
-
Dubai’s Arqaam Capital Eyes South Africa, Saudi Expansion
-
U.S. Targets Two UAE Firms For Dealing With Blacklisted Iran Banks
-
Airbus officially picked by Kuwait Airways
-
Turkish Airlines faces strike
-
GMR reveals top 50 Mena Corporate Brands
-
Coronavirus can spread from person to person
-
Kuwait Airways to sign $3 billion-plus Airbus deal



































