CBUAE foreign assets inch up to US$161.22bn in June

Share
2 min read
CBUAE is the monetary policy regulator of the UAE.
Share
  • According to the apex bank, foreign securities were down to $45 billion from $46.56 billion at the end of June,, with other foreign assets up to $17.27 billion
  • The monetary base, according to the CBUAE, grew by 0.1%, climbing from $169.20 billion at the end of May 2023 to $169.42 billion at the end of June 2023

Abu Dhabi, UAE–The Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE) has revealed that its total foreign assets increased to $161.22 billion at the end of June, from $160.70 billion in May.

The UAE’s current account balances and deposits with banks abroad amounted to $99 billion by the end of June, 2023, from $98.51 in the previous month, according to the latest figures revealed today by the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE).

Foreign securities are down to $45 billion from $46.56 billion during the same reference period, with other foreign assets up to $17.27 billion against $15.62 billion in May,

It’s noteworthy that the foreign assets exclude CBUAE’s Reserve Tranche Position (RTP) and SDR Holdings with the IMF.

According to the bank’s monetary & banking deployments report of June 2023, the monetary base grew by 0.1%, climbing from $169.20 billion at the end of May 2023 to $169.42 billion at the end of June 2023.

The main drivers of this expansion of the Monetary Base were increases in currency issued by 5.2% and in Reserve Account by 28.0%. However, banks & OFCs’ current accounts and overnight deposits of banks at CBUAE and monetary bills and islamic certificates of deposit decreased by 25.7% and 2.5%, respectively.

Gross banks’ assets, including bankers’ acceptances, rose by 0.1%, from $1,053.50 billion at the end of May 2023 to $1,054.59 billion at the end of June 2023. Domestic Credit expanded because of 2.5%, 3.7% and 3.4% increases in credit to the Government Sector, Public Sector and non-banking financial institutions, correspondingly. Whereas, credit to the private sector declined by 0.6%.

Total bank deposits decreased by 1.0%, falling from AED2,405.9 billion at the end of May 2023 to AED2,382.1 billion at the end of June 2023. The fall in total bank deposits was due to reduction in non-resident deposits by 11.8%, overshadowing the increase in resident deposits by 0.2%. Resident deposits rose owing to increases in government sector deposits. Private sector deposits and non-banking financial institutions’
deposits by 2.5%, 0.4% and 18.1%, respectively. However, public sector deposits decreased by 8.3%.

SPEEDREAD


MORE FROM THE POST