Saudi Arabia to inject $13.3bn into banking system
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Saudi Arabia to inject $13.3bn into banking system

Saudi Arabia to inject $13.3bn into banking system

The programme is aimed at helping banks amend and restructure loans without additional fees and support private sector employment

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Saudi Arabia will pump SAR50bn ($13.3bn) into the banking system to help manage the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic and the drop in oil prices.

The move by the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority, or SAMA, as the central bank is known, will support financial stability and boost credit facilities to the private sector, it said in a statement on Monday.

The programme is aimed at helping banks amend and restructure loans without additional fees and support private sector employment.

As a result of the virus outbreak, Saudi banks are “expected to encounter a reduction in activities in 2020, which will reflect negatively on profitability and possibly increase defaults,” the central bank said in its Financial Stability Report published last week.

Hit simultaneously by lower crude prices and coronavirus shutdowns, Saudi Arabia’s non-oil economy is expected to contract for the first time in over 30 years. The central bank had previously unveiled a SAR50bn programme to help mostly small private businesses in the country.

In March, the regulator urged banks to put in place a lending programme for at least six months to “assist in maintaining employment levels,” according to a document sent by the regulator to lenders and seen by Bloomberg.

Finance Minister Mohammed Al Jadaan said in a statement over the weekend that the government had also transferred SAR150bn from SAMA’s foreign reserves to the Public Investment Fund, the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, in March and April to help it finance a buying spree of assets in international markets that had dropped in value as a result of recent turmoil.

Read more: Saudi reserves fall more slowly after transfer to sovereign fund

Saudi Arabia’s fiscal deficit this year is set to widen to nearly 13 per cent of gross domestic product, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Gross official reserves are set to drop to around $456bn this year, continuing the trend into 2021, when they’re estimated at just over $409bn, IMF projections show. At the end of April, the central bank’s net foreign assets stood at $443bn.

The kingdom could borrow SAR220bn this year, about SAR100bn more than it forecast before the coronavirus outbreak, while keeping its drawdown from reserves at up to SAR120bn.

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