Drop in UAE monetary supply poses challenge for banks
Arabian Gulf Business Insight@arabian
Tech & routing
- Language
- English
Landing page
Operated by
Company info pending
Operator graph
Operated by Link Media Corporation Ltd · runs 2 domains across 2 networks
Landing page
www.agbi.com

1 page · final host: www.agbi.com
Tech stack
- MS Clarity
Auto-summary
At a glance
Taboola direct LP. Lead-gen / DTC. Running in 🇬🇧 United Kingdom, 🇶🇦 QA, 🇺🇸 United States. Active 6 days.
Landing page intelligence
agbi.com
Host
agbi.com
Path
/analysis/banking-finance/2026/05/uae-monetary-supply-drop-poses-challenge-for-banks/
Full URL
Redirect chain
1 hop- finalagbi.com
Landing page snapshot

Captured 2026-05-14
Tracking parameters
No query string on this URL.
Tracking setup · Taboola
Taboola passes site, site_id, campaign_id, campaign_item_id and click-id by default. Map those to your tracker's source/sub1-4 fields. Use {click_id} as your unique click identifier when posting back conversions.
?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}Default Taboola setup template: ?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}
Landing page text
Show landing page text
Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-05-12
▶
Landing page text
Show landing page text
Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-05-12
Drop in UAE monetary supply poses challenge for banks | AGBI Skip to content Skip to Search May 12, 2026 About us Partner with AGBI Login | Register Skip navigation Companies Economic data All GCC data All Mena data Bahrain Egypt Kuwait Oman Saudi Arabia Turkey Qatar UAE Saudi Arabia giga-projects Giga-projects tracker AlUla Amaala Diriyah Jeddah Central Neom New Murabba Qiddiya The Red Sea Roshn Rua Al Madinah Sectors Aviation Artificial Intelligence Business of Sport Construction Cybersecurity Defence Economy Energy Entrepreneurs Finance Food & Drink Gaming Giga-projects Health Industry Infrastructure Logistics Manufacturing Markets Oil & Gas Real Estate Retail Sustainability Tax Tech Telecoms Tourism Trade Transport Middle East All Middle East GCC UAE Saudi Arabia Bahrain Kuwait Oman Qatar Dubai Abu Dhabi Turkey Egypt Jordan Lebanon Opinion All Opinion All Writers Frank Kane Hussain Al Alawi Austyn Allison Simon Chadwick Lucy Chow Andrew Cunningham Chris Doyle John Grant Katy Holmes Martin Keulertz Matein Khalid Scott Livermore Alex Malouf Robin Mills Dr Nasser Saidi Analysis Interviews Topics Blockchain Cryptocurrency Donald Trump Electric vehicles Food security Gitex 2025 Hydrogen IPOs Islamic finance M&A Neom Opec Red Sea Global Saudi Vision 2030 Ukraine-Russia war Water Lifestyle People Work / Life Entertainment Arts Education World Africa Asia Europe North America Latin America About us Partner with AGBI Authors Executive Team Login Register with AGBI Finance Energy Construction Transport Tech Sport Opinion Analysis Economic Data All sections Analysis Banking & Finance Drop in UAE monetary supply poses challenge for banks By Matt Smith May 4, 2026, 3:54 PM Shutterstock/Alexander Chesarev Commuters and visitors at DMCC metro station in Dubai. The Iran war has hurt important economic sectors such as tourism, which in turn affects UAE banks Deterioration began in early March Large buildup of withdrawals Financial stability maintained Rising interbank lending rates and a declining monetary base indicate the UAE banking system is under strain, economists have said, with the central bank likely to intervene again to help lenders. The US-Israeli war on Iran , which started on February 28, has hurt important UAE economic sectors such as aviation, tourism, energy and consumer-focused industries, which in turn affects banks. The monetary base – known as M0 and including the currency in circulation and commercial banks reserves held at the central bank – began to deteriorate in early March, an Oxford Economics report states. This process accelerated as the war intensified so that M0 had fallen by AED74.6 billion ($20.3 billion), or 8.2 percent, on March 30. That would equate to an unsustainable 152 percent on an annualised basis. A decline in M0 indicates households or companies are withdrawing cash from the banking system, from the system overall, said Azad Zangana, head of GCC macroeconomics at Oxford Economics in Dubai. That tends to happen at certain points in the year during Eid or festivals, but its normally small whereas there was a very large buildup of withdrawals over a 30-day period that became quite concerning. UAE central bank data on commercial banks deposit levels is available up to February. Total deposits reached a record AED2.94 trillion that month, of which AED2.1 trillion was in dirhams and AED847 billion in foreign currencies. The March data will be published in mid-May. About AED1.7 trillion was held in accounts that could be withdrawn immediately and AED1.24 trillion in interest-bearing time deposits that can be accessed only after an agreed period without incurring financial penalties. Its likely that withdrawals by people leaving the country have contributed to M0 declining, said Zangana. It could also be a sign that people are losing jobs or theyre not earning enough, so are drawing down on their savings. Foreigners on average represent 13 percent of the populations of high-income countries, whereas the figure for the UAE is about 74 percent, according to Oxford Economics. That makes the UAE more vulnerable to money outflows, said Zangana. In 1990-1991, deposits in UAE banks declined by 15 percent following Iraqs invasion of Kuwait, according to Giyas Gokkent, chief economist at Bahrains Arab Banking Corporation. The Iran war is unlikely to have sparked outflows of a similar magnitude, he said. Nevertheless, sizeable deposit outflows could cause financial conditions to tighten and there could be fiscal costs, said Gokkent. Whatever happens, the large external assets of the UAE could shield the economy from volatility caused by outflows. Interbank lending costs The Oxford Economics report also pointed to a clear sign that ongoing withdrawals of capital were exerting stress on the banking system – the spread on the UAEs three-month interbank lending rate (known as EIBOR) versus the US overnight swap index more than doubled in March. EIBOR determines UAE borrowing, so a rising spread indicates tightening domestic liquidity and higher relative funding costs in the banking system. In response, the central bank launched what it described as a comprehensive package to reinforce the stability and resilience of the UAE banking sector in mid-March. The initiative includes making extra liquidity available to banks and a temporary relaxation of certain rules, said Gokkent. This helped M0 rebound somewhat but it has since retreated again. Financial stability has been maintained and stresses on banks have not mounted, said Gokkent. These are measures intended to mitigate the impact of adverse external shocks. Further reading: US asset manager has loaned $10bn to Gulf investors during war UAEs top banks boost provisions as Iran war clouds outlook Trump says US mulling UAE currency swap Zangana said a prolonged period of elevated EIBOR spreads posed a problem for banks. Thats why it was so important for the UAE central bank to inject liquidity, he said. It probably wont be the only time this year that it does so. Zangana described a mooted dirham-dollar swap arrangement between the UAE and the United States as precautionary. Its better to have that in place before you need it so that you dont need it, he added. This isnt a case of bailing the country out. The UAE still has a huge amount of reserves and foreign-denominated assets. Related content: Iran-Israel conflict Banking & Finance Finance Energy NESR outlines bullish energy outlook after strong quarterly results May 12, 2026 Transport Salik’s revenue falls 3% with lower Dubai traffic in March May 12, 2026 Analysis Real Estate War upends Saudi real estate push May 12, 2026 Oil & Gas Aramco expects oil woe until 2027 if no swift Hormuz resumption May 11, 2026 Oil & Gas World short nearly a billion barrels of oil, says Shell boss May 11, 2026 Oil & Gas Egypt raises fuel import budget to meet demand May 11, 2026 Trending NESR outlines bullish energy outlook after strong quarterly results May 12, 2026 Talent squeeze and ‘death by pilot’ – UAE’s big AI challenges May 12, 2026 Dubai Holding becomes Emaar’s largest stakeholder May 12, 2026 Turkish inflation returns as food and energy costs rise May 11, 2026 Dubai property sellers slashing millions off prices May 11, 2026 Latest articles ANALYSIS Economy Aramco’s swelling profits could bolster Saudi budget 6 hours ago Utilities Dewa profit doubles as revenue crosses $2bn 7 hours ago Renewable Energy Mubadala invests $325m in UK offshore wind farm 8 hours ago Renewable Energy Jordan signs $1bn deal for first green ammonia plant 9 hours ago Real Estate Oman launches $780m mountain-top villa project 11 hours ago Real Estate Dubai Holding becomes Emaar’s largest stakeholder 12 hours ago Real Estate Deyaar revenue rises 3% despite hospitality slump 13 hours ago Energy Saudi crude exports to China set for record low 13 hours ago Retail Talabat revenue rises 23%, supported by higher grocery sales 14 hours ago Energy Adnoc Gas opts for dividend despite r…
Text scraped from the landing page for research purposes. © respective owners. This text is sourced from the advertiser's public landing page; for removal, contact dmca@luba.media.
More from Arabian Gulf Business Insight
Dubai scraps property visa minimum for investor residency | AGBI Skip to…
Dubai Airports scaling up after first-quarter traffic plunge | AGBI Skip to…
Emirates posts bumper profit despite war disruption | AGBI Skip to content Skip…
Saudi Arabia Giga-Projects Tracker | AGBI Skip to content Skip to Search May…
Dubai off-plan: What are people buying and where? | AGBI Skip to content Skip…
Turkey keeps tight grip on monetary policy as inflation persists | AGBI Skip to…
agbi.comWhy Gulf oil is 'irreplaceable' | AGBI Skip to content Skip to Search May 12,…
GCC trade with US slumps despite Saudi export growth | AGBI Skip to content…