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Privileged in a Downturn: GCC Countries and the Global Financial Crisis Dr. Eckart Woertz Program Manager Economics Gulf Research Center Dubai Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA), Damascus, May 5-7, 2009 Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 1 Overview 1) Direct Financial Impact: Losses of Banks and SWFs 2) Indirect Financial Impact: Higher Costs of Lending 3) Effects on the Real Economy 4) Mitigating Measures of Central Banks and Governments 5) Changing GCC Investment Patterns Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 2 Direct Financial Impact Officially Announced Subprime Losses of GCC Banks Write-downs in $ million Bank Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank 272 Gulf Investment Corp. 246 (another 200 expected) Gulf International Bank 966 Arab Banking Corporation 1200 Gulf Bank, Kuwait 740 (currency derivatives) Source: Various Newspapers Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 3 Direct Financial Impact SWF Losses 2008, Estimates 0 -5 ADIA KIA QIA -10 SAMA Norwegian Oil Fund Percent -15 -20 -25 -30 -35 -40 -45 Source: Brad Setser, Rachel Ziemba, Council on Foreign Relations, January 2009, (as share of Dec. 2007 portfolio, excluding new inflows) Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 4 Direct Financial Impact SWF Assets Dec. 2008, Estimates 600 Billion US$ 500 400 300 200 100 0 ADIA KIA QIA SAMA Norwegian Oil Fund Source: Brad Setser, Rachel Ziemba, Council on Foreign Relations January 2009 Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 5 Indirect Financial Impact GCC Corporates (GCCI): Spread above LIBOR, HSBC/ DIFX GBCI Index Source: HSBC, DIFX Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 6 Irrational Exuberance? Until Oct. 2008: Capacity Constraints, Project Delays and Cost Escalation have become a daily occurrence Since then: Bubble has burst – how bad will it be? Population Dubai (mn) Gulf Construction Projects Billion US$ 500 400 300 Planned 200 Under Way 100 0 UAE 2007 1.4 2010 2.5 2017 4 2020 5 Saudi Qatar Kuwait Bahrain Oman Arabia Source: MEED Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 7 Effects on the Real Economy Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 8 Oil as % of Budget and Export Revenues Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 9 Oil Demand Down…, 1500 1000 500 0 -500 -1000 -1500 -2000 North America Europe Formers Soviet Union Source: IEA Middle East 2007 2008 Asia Latin America Af rica 2009 … but so is investment Supply constraints in the middle run Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 10 Mitigating Measure Central Banks • Inflation fears and reluctant following of Fed rate cuts in the first half of 2008 have given way to accommodative stance and successive rate cuts •Initial UAE AED50 bn facility too passive and too expensive, interbanking rates did not come down Direct deposit of AED 70bn • Kuwait more aggressive: Direct central bank deposits with banks, and early rate cuts from 5.75 percent to 4.5 percent on September 29 • SAMA equally cut its repo rate in October for the first time since 2007 and reduced reserve requirements from 13 percent to 10 percent • No coordinated GCC policy Danger of erratic intra-GCC capital flows, which could make capital controls tempting Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 11 Varying Deposit Insurance • Kuwait: All deposits guaranteed without cap or time limit •UAE: All existing deposits for three years, no limit, not new ones, all domestic and foreign banks with “significant operations”, regional and Iranian banks excluded • Saudi Arabia: Announcement of general commitment but no details • Qatar: No explicit guarantee • Bahrain: Insurance scheme since 1994 up to BD 15.000. Larger commitments impossible because of deposits/ GDP Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 12 SWF Stepping In? • West: State is massively buying into the economy •Russia and China: SWF investing in domestic Markets •Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) announces to invest in local capital markets • Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) has set aside funds of $5.3 bn in order to buy 10-20% stakes of Qatari banks • Abu Dhabi bailing out Dubai Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 13 Imbalances: Picture changing? Current Account Balances Euro area 1000 600 Newly industrialized Asian economies* 400 Japan 200 United States 14 China 20 13 20 12 20 11 20 10 20 09 20 08 20 07 20 06 20 -400 20 04 -200 05 0 20 Billion US$ 800 GCC -600 -800 Other Oil exporters** -1000 Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook Dataset April 2009 *Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea ** Russia, Norway, Venezuela, Algeria, Libya, Iran, Nigeria, Angola, Brunei. Iraq data not available Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 14 Surpluses to Deficits? Source: IIF Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 15 Capital Outflows Source: IIF Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 16 Too much Debt • Debt worldwide has risen dramatically. US, for example: Total private and public debt = $57 trillion. $187.000 for every man, woman and child • In 2008, US debt increased 5 times faster than US GDP • 79% ($45 trillion) of total US debt was created since 1990, a period primarily driven by debt instead of by productive activity Source: Grandfather Economic Report Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page1717 Diversification into the Euro? Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 18 Dollar hedging Watch this chart in times of quantitative easing: 90.0 80.0 70.0 60.0 50.0 40.0 30.0 20.0 10.0 0.0 U Eu US A ni te ro A d K i re a Al ng l C do ou m nt r ie s C hi na Ja pa n In di Sa Ru a ud ss i A ia ra bi Ku a w ai Q t at ar U AE Percent Gold % of total FX Reserves 2008 Source: WGC Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 19 GCC Food Security 60% import dependence by 2010 (FAO) Main GCC food imports from: EU, AUS, Ukraine, Syria, Brazil, India, US GCC eyes overseas investments: Sudan, Pakistan etc. GCC Net Food Import 18000 16000 US Million $ 14000 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 1990 1992 Bahrain Qatar GCC 1994 1996 1998 Kuwait Saudi Arabia 2000 2002 2004 2006 Oman United Arab Emirates Source: Trademap Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page2020 Key Trends • Money printing and lack of investments: Oil demand will remain sluggish but oil prices will rise again, possibly dramatically • Asset management: More domestic, more strategic, more conservative. Less SWFs? • Lack of institutions: More domestic project finance, a GCC bond market and credit for SMEs necessary Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 21 Thank You Gulf Research Center P.O. Box: 80758, Dubai United Arab Emirates www.grc.ae Tel: +971 4 3247770 Fax: +971 4 3247771 Copyright © Gulf Research Center 2009 All rights reserved Page 22