DUBAI: Mashreq is holding talks with Citigroup about acquiring its retail banking business in Egypt and is targeting net profit growth in 2015 of between 6 percent and 10 percent, the Dubai bank's chief executive said on Sunday.
Abdul Aziz Al-Ghurair made the remarks to reporters after the emirate's third-largest bank by assets reported a 28 percent jump in fourth-quarter earnings on the back of improved operating income.
With Emirates NBD, which recorded a 82 percent net profit increase, it marked a positive start to the fourth-quarter reporting season for the United Arab Emirates' banks, who have benefited from strong domestic economic conditions in recent quarters.
Citi has received bids from ten banks for its Egyptian consumer business after putting it up for sale in October to trim costs, sources told Reuters last week.
"We are in dialogue with Citi and the regulator in Egypt to explore the potential of this business," Al-Ghurair confirmed, adding Mashreq had yet to appoint advisors but would do so as the process progressed.
Citi's assets can only be sold to banks already operating in the North African country as the US lender is retaining its banking licence, Al-Ghurair said. Mashreq has around 10 branches in Egypt.
Across the Gulf, strong competition at home is forcing banks to look overseas for their next stage of growth. Al-Ghurair admitted in September that Mashreq was looking to expand in Egypt and Turkey.
The bank hopes to generate 25 percent of its revenue from international sources, up from 18 percent now.
Mashreq made 644.3 million dirhams ($175.4 million) for the three months to Dec. 31, compared with 504.6 million dirhams in the corresponding period of 2013, boosted by a 20 percent and 18
percent year-on-year rise in fee and net interest income respectively.
Rarely traded, Mashreq's shares gained 2.3 percent in positive trading on the Dubai bourse.
Into 2015, Mashreq's loan growth was expected to be around 5 percent to 8 percent as increased lending to large corporates and state-linked entities, who could ride out any disruption in
the local economy from oil price-related volatility, offset a decline in consumer lending, according to Al-Ghurair.
The CEO said he expected its retail business would shrink in the coming 6-12 months as the UAE's recently-introduced credit bureau highlighted customers' total borrowings for the first time, making banks generally more cautious on retail lending.
Mashreq's lending book grew 15.1 percent in 2014.
The bank plans to sell a $500 million bond which would boost its Tier 2 — or supplementary — capital, Al-Ghurair said, adding the issue just needed shareholder approval before coming to
market. He declined to say if banks had been appointed to arrange the transaction.
Banks in the UAE, including Dubai Islamic Bank and ENBD, have been selling capital-boosting debt instruments to diversify their shareholder base and enhance their reserves in recent months after two years of strong loan growth.
Mashreq's total capital adequacy ratio, a combination of Tier 1 and 2 capital and regarded as one of the key indicators of a bank's health, was 16.6 percent at the end of December, the statement said.
In future, Al-Ghurair said Mashreq could also boost its reserves by retaining more earnings, as opposed to paying out dividends to shareholders.
Mashreq said its board proposed a 40 percent cash dividend for 2014, in line with its pay-out for the previous year, according to Thomson Reuters data.
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