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Amlak suspends new mortgage loans

by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it  on Thursday, 20 November 2008
HAPPIER DAYS: File photo of October 2007 property exhibition. (Getty Images)

Dubai Islamic mortgage lender Amlak has suspended new loans, its chief executive said on Wednesday, as the global credit crunch hits the property sector in the Gulf's trading hub.

"We are reviewing our existing credit policy to ensure optimum servicing of existing and prospective accounts... hence our temporary measures of not sourcing new applications will bring us up to the level we have outlined in our management strategy," Arif Alharmi said in a statement.

Dubai faces a slowdown in loan growth and real estate activity as it grapples with the fallout from the global financial crisis.

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Emaar Properties, Dubai's largest listed developer, said last week it was giving its customers more time to repay their mortgages as liquidity constraints in the local banking sector has exacerbated the problems of securing home finance.

Emirates NBD, the UAE's largest bank, has halted retail lending to foreigners employed by top Dubai property firms on fears the slowdown could jeopardise their jobs and income, according to an internal document obtained by newswire Reuters, although the bank denied the move.

Amlak and fellow mortgage lender Tamweel are aiming to complete a $1.6 billion merger by the end of the first quarter of 2009 despite the crisis which has almost frozen global and regional interbank lending and stalled medium to long-term financing.

Speaking at a bankers' meeting earlier on Wednesday, Amlak chairman Nasser Al-Shaikh said the company may need to access retail deposits in some form.

Al-Shaikh said home finance across the world had been "challenged" and that the existing business plans were no longer sustainable and had to be changed.

"They don't have to become banks but something similar to the savings and loans model in other countries," Al-Shaikh said, adding that Amlak was working closely with the UAE's central bank and finance ministry to bring in the changes. (Reuters)

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wow
Posted by Paul, Dubai, UAE on Thursday 20 November 2008 at 12:03 UAE time


Amlak suspends lending completely. I suspect other lenders will follow shortly and exit from the market completely. With virtually no mortgages available, the wipeout will be massive.

The ominous part was "Amlak chairman Nasser Al-Shaikh said the company may need to access retail deposits in some form". They need retail depositer cash because no international banks will lend to them. Would you deposit your cash with them knowing that other banks will not? It would be safer under the bed than in an institution with massive exposure to UAE property.
liquidity crunch
Posted by paresh, dubai, dubai on Thursday 20 November 2008 at 09:10 UAE time


Amlak's move is not surprising given that it does not do retail banking and relies on sourcing funds for lending. Overall there is a lending curtailment by all major banks who depend on deposits for their lending and this signifies a liquidity crunch in U.A.E.

The question is can the govt of Dubai get more cash into the system to keep business moving foward??

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