09/05/2025 01:35 AST

The UAE's banking sector witnessed continued momentum in February, as key indicators of liquidity and credit expanded steadily.

Gross banking assets, including bankers' acceptances, rose by 1.6 percent to 4.63 trillion dirhams ($1.26 trillion), according to data from the Central Bank of the UAE.

Gross credit also saw an uptick, increasing by 0.9 percent to 2.21 trillion dirhams, driven by a 17.1 billion dirham jump in foreign credit and a 1.7 billion dirham rise in domestic credit.

Meanwhile, M1 - the narrowest measure of the country's money supply - climbed 1.8 percent to 982.9 billion dirhams, supported by gains in both currency in circulation and demand deposits.

The monthly increase was driven by a 13.5 billion dirham gain in monetary deposits and a 4.1 billion dirham rise in currency outside banks.

M1 - comprising physical currency and current account balances - is a key measure of liquidity immediately available for household and business spending.

The pickup in M1 comes amid a broader expansion in liquidity across the UAE's financial system, reflecting stable credit conditions and sustained economic activity. The UAE has been supported by robust non-oil growth, rising investment, and steady financial sector performance heading into 2025.

Broader money aggregates also advanced, with M2 - which includes savings and time deposits in addition to M1 - rising 1.8 percent to 2.36 trillion dirhams, supported by a 25 billion dirham increase in quasi-monetary deposits.

M3, which includes M2 and government deposits, grew 0.8 percent to 2.81 trillion dirhams. The rise was primarily driven by the M2 expansion, offsetting a 19 billion dirham decline in government deposits.

The UAE's monetary base rose 3.1 percent to 816.6 billion dirhams. The increase was supported by an 11.4 percent rise in overnight deposits and current accounts held by banks and financial institutions at the central bank.

Monetary bills and Islamic certificates of deposit rose 6.2 percent, while currency issuance increased 3.4 percent. These gains outweighed a 6.1 percent drop in reserve account balances.

Within domestic credit, lending to the private sector rose 0.7 percent, and loans to non-banking financial institutions jumped 5.2 percent. These increases offset a 2 percent decline in credit to government-related entities and a 1.4 percent drop in lending to the government sector.

The country's total bank deposits climbed by 1.2 percent, reaching 2.87 trillion dirhams at the end of February, up from 2.84 trillion dirhams in January.

This growth was driven by a 0.8 percent rise in resident deposits and a 5.1 percent increase in non-resident deposits.

The increase in resident deposits was attributed to higher deposits from government-related entities by 3.8 percent, private sector by 1.4 percent, and non-banking financial institutions by 5.6 percent, which outweighed a 4 percent decline in government sector deposits.


Arab News

Ticker Price Volume
Mubadala's assets under management grew to Dh1.2 trillion in 2024

09/05/2025

Mubadala Investment Company, the Abu Dhabi-based sovereign investor, on Thursday reported that its assets under management grew 9.1 per cent year-on-year in 2024 to Dh1.2 trillion, with annualised r

Khaleej Times

Saudi Arabia Expands Homeownership Eligibility in Government Housing Projects

09/05/2025

Saudi Arabia's Cabinet has approved a new decision allowing the Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing to sell residential units within its housing projects to individuals who are not be

Arab News

Saudi Arabia sees 73% surge in e-commerce sales using MADA cards

09/05/2025

Saudi e-commerce sales via MADA cards surged 73.4 percent year on year in March to a record SR27.55 billion ($7.34 billion), reflecting rapid growth in the Kingdom's digital payment ecosystem.
<

Arab News

Saudi Arabia sees 13% rise in patent filing to reach 8,029 in 2024?

09/05/2025

Saudi Arabia's intellectual property landscape continued its robust growth in 2024, with patent filings rising by 13.33 percent year on year to reach a record 8,029, according to the Saudi Authority

Arab News

GCC central banks hold interest rates steady for 3rd time following Fed's move

09/05/2025

Gulf Cooperation Council central banks have kept interest rates steady for the third consecutive period, mirroring the US Federal Reserve's decision to hold its benchmark rate between 4.25 percent an

Arab News